Verbal Test 1: Assessment Day
Verbal Test 1: Assessment Day
Verbal Test 1: Assessment Day
Solutions Booklet
Instructions
This verbal reasoning test comprises 30 questions, and you will have 25 minutes in which to
correctly answer as many as you can.
You will be presented with a passage to read, and a statement about that passage. For each
statement you must select one of the following answers:
True: The statement follows logically from the information contained in the passage.
False: The statement is logically false from the information contained in the passage.
Cannot Say: It is not possible to determine whether the statement is true or false
without further information.
You will have to work quickly and accurately to perform well in this test. If you don’t know the
answer to a question, leave it and come back to it if you have time.
Try to find a time and place where you will not be interrupted during the test. When you
are ready, begin the test.
Assessment Day
Practice Aptitude Tests
Checked shirts are now synonymous with the technology entrepreneur. Whilst
nobody can be attributed with starting the craze, this criss-crossed personal
statement has since been adopted by technology whiz-kids from Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg to Twitter co-founder Eva William. The open-necked checked shirt
look is beginning to be emulated by American teenagers. The important question
being asked by fashion retailers is whether this trend will grow beyond its currently
niche audience to the mass market. Fashion trends are fickle and if retailers get it
wrong they are quickly punished through falling revenue. That is why fashion outlet
Dicies often attends social gatherings and exhibitions where they expect to find lots
of young people; their thinking is that if they can observe fashion trends and be
ahead of the curve they will get a larger slice of the retail pie.
True - The second sentence says “Twitter co-founder Eva William1” so if Eva was a
co-founder there must have been at least one other person named as a company
founder.
False - The second sentence tells us that “whilst nobody can be attributed with
starting the craze, this1has now been adopted by technology whiz-kids from
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg”. So firstly the trend cannot be attributed to any
one person, but also important is the fact that the passage tells us Mark Zuckerberg
has “since” started wearing these shirts.
False - The first sentence of the second paragraph tells us that “Fashion trends are
fickle1”. If something is fickle, it is not true to say that it is steady; in fact fickle
should be associated with the opposite of stable.
Cannot say - The passage tells us only that the EU are seeking to preserve existing
stocks and environmentalists wish to avoid depletion. The passage does not tell us if
fish stocks are near to depletion or indeed if they are plentiful, so we must answer
Cannot Say.
True - The passage states that environmental groups believe “existing approaches
are not working” and “other steps need to be taken”. So if measures other than
existing are called for, this must mean new methods are called for.
False - The passage states that fishermen can be fined “as soon as the catch is
landed -but not before-’” so they cannot be fined for catching too many fish.
Cannot say - The passage tells us that “supporters claim that they are a 1
alternative to traditional fossil fuels like coal and petroleum”. So this tells us what
supporters claim, but not what is necessarily the case.
The passage also tells us that “Biofuels are increasingly used in the transportation
sector”. So this does not tell us either way if they are used specifically for air travel.
Since the passage does not tell us either way if this statement is definitely true or
definitely false, we must answer Cannot Say.
True - The passage says that one type of plant used in the production of biofuels has
its oil “extracted and heated to reduce viscosity”. Reducing viscosity means making a
liquid less thick and more free-flowing.
Cannot say - This is a sneaky one. The passage tells us that plants with high oil
content “have the oil extracted and heated to reduce viscosity before the oil is used”.
The passage also tells us about plants which are high in sugar which are fermented
to produce ethanol. However the passage does not tell us specifically if plants with
high oil content can or cannot be used to produce ethanol.
Q10 Flexible working arrangements are conducive to better job satisfaction for
employees.
Q11 Employees are legally entitled to work flexible hours if they request to do so.
False - The passage states that “All employees have a statutory right to request
flexible working arrangements; the law extends no further than insisting employers
consider and respond to these requests within a predefined timescale”. So the
passage is telling us that the law requires the employer to consider the employee’s
request but that is as far as the law goes; i.e. it does not go as far as saying they
have to honour the request.
True - The passage tells us that by adopting flexible working hours, staff are “more
motivated and less likely to leave”. We are also told that “Staff recruitment costs are
not insignificant to businesses.” So the passage says that by improving staff
retention, businesses are more likely to save money on recruitment costs by adopting
flexible working hours.
False - The first sentence tells us that “most forms of discrimination in the workplace
have been outlawed”. So even though not all forms of discrimination have been
outlawed (made illegal), it is not true to say that no legislation exists.
Q14 Males are less likely to experience the glass ceiling effect than females.
Cannot say - The third sentence tells us what the glass ceiling is and the fourth
sentence tells us: ”Originally coined to illustrate the hidden use of sexual
discrimination against women in professional environments, it is now used to
describe any form of discrimination”. So if we know it covers all sorts of discrimination
and the passage doesn’t go on to say if females are more likely to suffer than males,
we cannot say for sure whether this statement is true or false, so we have to answer
Cannot Say.
True - The passage tells us that the glass ceiling describes discrimination which is
“both unwritten and unacknowledged” and also that the term applies to “any form of
discrimination, such as racism or ageism, which prevents qualified or
experienced employees reaching even basic levels within their organisation”. So it is
indeed possible that a ‘glass ceiling’ can prevent a qualified person getting to the top
of their field.
False - The passage tells us that automating these weaving processes meant that
they were better suited to steam power, “which had become the new means of
propulsion shortly before their invention” So if steam power was developed before
automated weaving, the automation cannot have been a necessary precursor.
Q17 The invention of the Flying Shuttle and the Spinning Jenny led to job losses
in the textile industry
Cannot say - Whilst this might be an assumption one makes, the passage does not
say this explicitly. For example it would be that the same workforce took on different
jobs within the textile industry or that they helped produce an increase in output. The
passage does not tell whether these inventions did or didn’t lead to job losses, so we
must answer Cannot Say.
Cannot say - The passage talks about these inventions reducing the manual labour
required, but it does not tell us what levels of manual labour were required before (or
after for that matter) the Flying Shuttle and Spinning Jenny came along. Since this
information is not covered in the passage, we have to answer Cannot Say.
Cannot say - The passage tells us that “Many local authorities have designed and
implemented full end-to-end recycling programmes”, however the passage does not
tell us if these are the majority or the minority, so we have to answer Cannot Say.
True - The last sentence of the passage says that “some critics counter-claim that
recycling actually consumes more resources than it saves”. Consuming more
resources than it saves would considered as being wasteful, so the statement is true.
False - The fifth sentence tells us “the majority of people are willing to participate, but
are more likely to participate if they can easily understand what goes where”. So we
are told that the majority of the public are willing to participate in recycling. The
second part of the statement about not knowing what goes where is not important
since we have already established that the majority of people are willing to recycle
and therefore that the statement is false.
Q22 The presence of ice in these debris-covered formations would be the first
discoveries of ice on Mars.
False - The fourth sentence tells us “There are other known deposits of ice at the
polar caps where temperatures are much lower”. So we are told that the discoveries
being reported are not the first instances of ice on Mars.
Q23 NASA believes that there could be enough water on Mars to support human
life.
Cannot say - The passage does not tell us about NASA’s view on whether Mars has
enough water to support human life; the passage says only “some scientists believe
that there could be enough water held in these formations to support humans in
future Mars missions”. We are not told whether these scientists are from NASA or
not.
True - The first sentence tells us that radar images were used as far back as the
1970s, so radar technology must have existed in the 1980s.
Q25 Buildings cause 45% of all the carbon emissions in the UK.
Cannot say - The second sentence tells us that “Buildings account for 45% of all UK
greenhouse gas emissions such as carbon dioxide and methane”. So don’t be caught
out; greenhouse gas emissions can include carbon and can include methane, or
other greenhouse gasses. But we are not told the makeup of “greenhouse gas
emissions” emitted from buildings. Many greenhouse gasses are not carbon based
(water vapour as an example). But since we are not told by the article, we cannot say
for sure.
Q26 Energy efficiency legislation for new construction is more onerous than for
existing buildings.
Cannot say - Whilst the passage explains how it would be easier to legislate more
heavily on new construction than for existing buildings, the passage does not tell us
what the current level of legislation is for each category.
False - The sixth sentence says “All new building construction requires approval from
authorities and regulating bodes”. So according to the passage it is not true that
some building construction is exempt.
True - The penultimate sentence tells us that “wildfires can play an important role in
the ecosystem1 returning beneficial nutrients to the ground and killing disease”. So
we are told that there can be some benefits to the natural environment in certain
circumstances.
False - The fourth sentence tells us that “humans start eighty per cent of all wildfires”.
So if humans are responsible for 80% of wildfires, it cannot be true that 25% are
started naturally.
Q30 In the USA there are typically 10,000 wildfires each month.
Cannot say - The passage says that there is an average annual rate of 120,000
wildfires, but it does not state that these are evenly distributed through the year.
Therefore one cannot divide this figure by 12 to get an average monthly figure (e.g.
perhaps 50% happen in July or August). Since we are not told the monthly figure, we
have to answer Cannot Say.