
| Police Written Test 101 |
| By: George Godoy |
You've taken the first step. Your application is in the
hands of a police recruiter. Now you're ready to take the plunge with the
written test. Like everything else in your quest for the badge, the key to
success in the written test is: preparation.
First on your prep list is the test study guide. Before you leave the
recruiter's office, ask for one, or where you can get one. Many agencies
have an online guide available on their website. These test guides tell you
what types of questions to expect and how many there are per section, how
much time you have on each section, and what skills and abilities are tested.
If your agency does not have a test guide, ask the recruiter or your
department contact, for information about the test. Find out where the test
is taken, the time required to complete the test, what types of questions
will be on the test (multiple choice, essay, etc.) and what areas of
knowledge will be tested.
Ask also if the test is Civil Service. Civil service tests are usually only
offered once or twice a year, and re-testing may also be limited. Check your
guide for specifics, but in general, police written tests are timed, contain
100 to 200 questions in several sections, require 2-3 hours time for
completion and are scored as pass/fail or require 70% correct to pass. Most
tests are completed by hand (pencil-marked answer sheets), but many are
taken on computers.
Study preparation for the written test is simple and straightforward. Read
your test guide front to back and then read it again. Check out the library,
internet and bookstore for more resources on police written tests,
especially for sources with sample questions. Most libraries will have books
in the reference section that contain explanations of the test sections most
commonly used and sample questions for each. If
you find a test section that you feel is a weak area for you, spend extra
time on it to tone down test day anxiety.
Nearly every police written test will include 5 areas of evaluation. These
areas may be covered in separate sections of questions, or may be bundled
within 2 or 3 sections. They include:
1. Accuracy of Observation/Memory
Your ability to retain and recall specific information. You will be given
printed information, allowed to read and study it (no note-taking) for a
certain amount of time (5 to 25 minutes), then the materials are returned
and you are tested on the contents. Tests may be strictly memory recall, or
may ask for conclusions to be drawn from the information given.
This test section evaluates your ability to perform police-related duties
such as: remembering suspect descriptions, wanted posters/pictures,
department policies and procedures, and safety and tactical procedures.
2. Written Skills
Your ability to communicate in writing. You will be given either a spelling
or vocabulary test usually consisting of 25-50 words to be defined and
spelled correctly. You will also be given, in some form, a scenario to read
and take notes on. You will then write a report that relates to specific
test-defined points of the scenario.
This test section evaluates your ability to perform police-related duties
such as: report writing, witness statements and completing department forms.
3. Reading Comprehension
Your ability to understand what you read. You will be given materials to
read and will then answer multiple choice questions on that information to
show that you understand and can apply information you read.
This test section evaluates your ability to perform police-related duties
such as: accurately reading and comprehending technical and legal
information - court orders, department policy, state law, haz-mat warnings
and training materials, for example.
Prepare for test sections 1 - 3 by cornering family and friends to give you
verbal or written answer pop-quizzes on information you've read in
newspapers and magazines. This is so close to a game that you shouldn't have
any trouble finding people to 'play'.
4. Decision Making/Judgment Skills
Your ability to identify and comprehend critical elements of a situation and
to choose an appropriate course of action. You will be given written, audio
or video materials and then asked to pick the best response out of several
responses, within an extremely limited time frame (10 seconds, for example).
This test section evaluates your ability to perform police-related duties
such as: responding calmly to provocation, handling authority appropriately,
using unbiased enforcement, professional ethics and social maturity.
Prepare for test section 4 by studying sample questions, reading newspaper
accounts of crimes and proposing what your response would be, and observing
officer response during a police ride along.
5. Navigational Skills/Directional Orientation
Your ability to read maps and recognize the direction you are traveling. You
will be given materials that ask you to find locations on maps, show point
to point routes for specific location responses and suspect vehicle and foot
chases.
This test section evaluates your ability to perform police-related duties
such as: routing to calls to decrease response time, knowledge of street
closures and need for re-routing, radio transmissions of a suspect chase,
and emergency response to officer down/needs assistance.
Prepare for test section 5 by observing the officer during a ride along,
sticking a compass in your vehicle and learning to use landmarks as
orientation guides and lastly, involve friends or family in imaginary
suspect 'chases'. Your 'chase' exercise would be something like this: Both
drivers are in cell phone contact. Your vehicle is 2 blocks away from your
partner's vehicle. You will begin your imaginary 'chase' of a suspect (at
legal speeds) while giving directions to your 'backup' over your cell phone.
Set a time limit (5 minutes). When the suspect is
'apprehended', see if your backup finds you. Then switch roles and have your
partner be the lead vehicle. Your job will be to follow, and also to
anticipate routes that would allow you to block the suspects anticipated
direction of travel. Again, this is a great game and you'll have little
trouble finding partners.
The police written test is designed to evaluate multiple abilities and
skills. In addition to the five evaluation sections noted above, you will
also find simple math and problem-solving math questions, and behavioral
questions that indicate character, compliance with laws and personal
accountability.
Police Practice Tests & Video Training
The newest police practice tests, with Video Training! 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
About the Author:
Sgt. George Godoy recently retired after 22 years of police service in the
Denver, CO area. He has created
Police Exam911 to help police
officer candidates get top scores on their written exam.
contact us l
about us
l © police test .info 2006