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Student Pharmacy Technician Maths Test
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Hi, Can anyone help? My daughter has an interview next week for a Student Pharmacy Technician vacancy and has been told she must complete a maths test and get at least 70% correct to get through the interview stage. Can anyone give us an idea of what this test is like - sample questions??? Level of difficulty??
Any answers would be very much appreciated.
Thanks
Any answers would be very much appreciated.
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by debhaines. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for that but she has been told it is a bit more involved than that - with lots of percentage and fraction calculations. I suggested to my daughter that it may be a basic numeracy test but she is convinced it is a lot more difficult. Has anybody out there actually done one of these tests at an interview for this particular post?
will be looking at drug calculations and dosages, i expect - mainly tablets, liquida and injectable substances - probably not as far as drips etc. google for these as they involve looking at percentages and fractions in the calculations. if she is going for a pharmacy post, she will be dealing with prescriptions and dispensing drugs - no?
I've used various tests in the past as part of recruitment assessment centres - both Verbal and Numeric Reasoning. If the organisation has any sense, it will have a guideline passmark, but it won't fail a good all round candidate who runs a few marks short.
These tests are designed so that one doesn't need specific knowledge to do them - but require an ability to juggle numbers around in the head. The perceived level of difficulty (by a candidate) depends on one's ability!! Knowing sample questions don't (in my opinion) help get a better score. I used to test myself using the same battery set every 6 months os so and one doesn't 'remember' the answers or the best way to manipulate them to get the answer. But good luck to her.
These tests are designed so that one doesn't need specific knowledge to do them - but require an ability to juggle numbers around in the head. The perceived level of difficulty (by a candidate) depends on one's ability!! Knowing sample questions don't (in my opinion) help get a better score. I used to test myself using the same battery set every 6 months os so and one doesn't 'remember' the answers or the best way to manipulate them to get the answer. But good luck to her.
This site offering advice on innumeracy and reasoning tests may aid anyone taking an assessment
http://www.shldirect.com/numerical.html
http://www.shldirect.com/numerical.html
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