Monday 25 October 2010

The Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal

That’s what I did today. A Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal. It’s the first time I’d come across this one! There is a limited number of practice you can do on it but this is what I found:

About Watson-Glaser from GetFeedback
Watson-Glaser Sample Questions
Watson-Glaser Practice test from Hogan Lovells


Personal Experience:
Test items: 31
Time given: 60 minutes
Backgracking: Allowed
Difficulty: Hard
 
(Notes: It took me 30 minutes to do the test
and I used the remaining time to backtrack.)


There are five question areas:

    1. Inference
    2. Recognition of assumptions
    3. Deduction
    4. Intepretation
    5. Evaluation of arguments

I did a critical thinking AS-Level at college as well so I was already slightly familiarised with the types of problems presented. If you have trouble with these kinds of problems I suggest you read a book on Critical Thinking to help you familiarise yourself. At least go over the sections that are relevant and teach you the tips and tricks on how to ace the questions.

I have some of my own tips that help me with some of the questions. Here they are! (They may not make sense until you have looked at the Watson-Glaser sample questions, found in the link above).

Tip 1: Always make a mental note when you see any of the statements or questions use extremist words such as ‘always’, ‘everytime’, ‘never’ or ‘only’. This is critical information to answering the question. So if the statement suggests that “All rainy days are boring” and follows up with the answer-statment “Therefore, some rainy days are not boring” that can immediately be disregarded because ‘ALL’ rainy days are boring. That was a simple example but it really does help sometimes with the complex ones.

Tip 2: Think about it like this, if it seems to be true but is not definitely true (T) - i.e. the statement does not directly match with a statements in the text - then it is more likely to be probably true (PT). However, if the statement matches up with a phrase in the text then it is more likely to be definitely true (T).

Tip 3: Do practice and make sure you understand all the questions properly and what they want from you. Then, do practice tests and makes sure you understand the logic of any of the questions you answered incorrectly. It may help you in similar formatted questions.

Tip 4: BE AWAKE. This test requires a lot of concentration.

Overall I found the test difficult and I am not sure how well I did even though I backtracked through the test to double check my answers. There’s just no way of knowing until I get the result. I will update as soon as the results come through!

7 comments:

  1. Pearson (the publisher of the Watson-Glaser) have a full-length practice test for you to try. It's FREE and you'll receive a feedback report on your score containing tips on how to improve:

    http://www.talentlens.co.uk/practice-aptitude.aspx

    ReplyDelete
  2. How did you do on the test?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I can't access the site, is there another site?

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  4. Hi, does anyone have any information where I could find relevant tests please kindly publish here.

    Many thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  5. There is a free PDF critical thinking test with solutions here:

    http://www.assessmentday.co.uk/watson-glaser-critical-thinking.htm

    Great blog by the way thelondongrad. I hope you've found employment now.

    ReplyDelete
  6. There more free sample questions here: http://www.jobtestprep.co.uk/watson-glaser-sample-questions

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  7. Thank you for sharing this informative post on the Watson Glaser test.

    ReplyDelete