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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
General Discussion
Herbert Smith Freehills online test
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<blockquote data-quote="aditik" data-source="post: 7427" data-attributes="member: 300"><p>Hey so the real test was definitely longer than the practice. I think verbal reasoning was quite straightforward, and you can definitely get the hang of it by doing some online practice tests. </p><p></p><p>With the SJT, I am really not sure, but I think one way of prepping is to make a list of qualities they look for (from the practice test + quiz + their brochure) and try to apply them to the scenarios you get in the test. Most of the SJT was problem-solving, so try breaking down the scenario into issues, match them to specific desired qualities, and then rank each of the options accordingly? (I don't know if I am making sense, but this was roughly my approach) </p><p></p><p>With the personality questionnaire, I really have no idea, as I suppose there is no right/wrong answer? I guess being honest works well in this section; don't act like someone you are not!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aditik, post: 7427, member: 300"] Hey so the real test was definitely longer than the practice. I think verbal reasoning was quite straightforward, and you can definitely get the hang of it by doing some online practice tests. With the SJT, I am really not sure, but I think one way of prepping is to make a list of qualities they look for (from the practice test + quiz + their brochure) and try to apply them to the scenarios you get in the test. Most of the SJT was problem-solving, so try breaking down the scenario into issues, match them to specific desired qualities, and then rank each of the options accordingly? (I don't know if I am making sense, but this was roughly my approach) With the personality questionnaire, I really have no idea, as I suppose there is no right/wrong answer? I guess being honest works well in this section; don't act like someone you are not! [/QUOTE]
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Herbert Smith Freehills online test
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