test
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 30
Likes: 0
From: UK
The usual stuff, nothing complicated.
A maths and physics paper (to GCSE level), joystick control on a PC simulator and some tests to see your multi tasking ability such as remembering numbers, colors and shapes at the same time.
A maths and physics paper (to GCSE level), joystick control on a PC simulator and some tests to see your multi tasking ability such as remembering numbers, colors and shapes at the same time.
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
From: Portugal
Are you guys sure...going to do my apptitude soon at FTE and havent been working without a calulator in the past 6 years.... its embarassing to say...that a person with an A-level in Physics and Maths canīt remember to long divide on paper....i think i will just get back to my GCSE books!
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
From: UK
I did the aptitude tests at CabAir last Autumn. It consisted of a maths and physics exam, which you're given 1.5 hours each. I did both in about 25 minutes a piece, and scored 85 for maths, 78 for physics. All questions are multiple-choice and you're given a calculator and spare paper for workings out. My physics let me down a bit as I couldn't remember some of the formulas I knew back in school, (right-hand rule, etc.) Level is about advanced GCSE. Thankfully some the ones where you think "how the heck do I calculate that?" can be figured out by taking each of the answers in turn and working backwards.
The computer test is PilApt, and measures coordination and mental loading. It starts of with simple tests like where you control a wayward cross-hair, and builds upon them to the point where you'rehaving to do that while monitor coloured shapes and listening to a stepped countdown, and have to identify changes. It gets quite stressful, but anyone with a decent amount of computer game experience should be able to handle it.
I did well, my scores were well into the green and the evaluation was "minimal training risk", which was quite a confidence boost!
Si
The computer test is PilApt, and measures coordination and mental loading. It starts of with simple tests like where you control a wayward cross-hair, and builds upon them to the point where you'rehaving to do that while monitor coloured shapes and listening to a stepped countdown, and have to identify changes. It gets quite stressful, but anyone with a decent amount of computer game experience should be able to handle it.
I did well, my scores were well into the green and the evaluation was "minimal training risk", which was quite a confidence boost!
Si
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 30
Likes: 0
From: UK
Thats how it was when I did it about 8 months ago.
Brush up on things like the formulae that involve mass, speed, acceleration, potential and kinetic energy etc as well as electrical circuits (such as having fuses in series or parallel).
Brush up on things like the formulae that involve mass, speed, acceleration, potential and kinetic energy etc as well as electrical circuits (such as having fuses in series or parallel).




