- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 60
I wrote in March, and it was surprisingly easy. However, ignore this fact, look at it behind a veil of abject terror, and attempt to completely overcompensate for a weakness that most likely doesn't exist.
I was terrified, studied a bit of math, and managed to get in the 98th percentile (they handed me the wrong sheet and I got to see all my stats, I'm still wondering what the "P.O.E.T" occupation is, though I do know I did well on the vocab part.) It's intimidating, and in my case it was my first experience with the military beyond, but I did well enough to qualify for all the trades so I'm happy (sadly, since I'm joining the reserves some of those trades were closed to me, like Airplane Mechanic).
And yeah, if you're worried about vocab, just read a few of the classics, or things on the Canada Reads book list, you'll do fine. If you're worried about math, look at long division, ratios, percentiles, fractions (just knowing how to apply arithmetic to fractions is enough), and word problems. As for spacial, that's innate to an extent, but try cutting out shapes, placing patterns on them, and then putting them together; think Grade 4.
Only thing I can really recommend for the test itself (and I do this for all test), is pretend you have half the time you actually have, and RUSH. Then go back as many times as possible before the times runs out. And never spend more than 40 seconds per question in the first spurt.
I was terrified, studied a bit of math, and managed to get in the 98th percentile (they handed me the wrong sheet and I got to see all my stats, I'm still wondering what the "P.O.E.T" occupation is, though I do know I did well on the vocab part.) It's intimidating, and in my case it was my first experience with the military beyond, but I did well enough to qualify for all the trades so I'm happy (sadly, since I'm joining the reserves some of those trades were closed to me, like Airplane Mechanic).
And yeah, if you're worried about vocab, just read a few of the classics, or things on the Canada Reads book list, you'll do fine. If you're worried about math, look at long division, ratios, percentiles, fractions (just knowing how to apply arithmetic to fractions is enough), and word problems. As for spacial, that's innate to an extent, but try cutting out shapes, placing patterns on them, and then putting them together; think Grade 4.
Only thing I can really recommend for the test itself (and I do this for all test), is pretend you have half the time you actually have, and RUSH. Then go back as many times as possible before the times runs out. And never spend more than 40 seconds per question in the first spurt.