Numerical, Verbal and Logical Reasoning Practice for South African Recruiters (Free Test Strategies)

As a recruiter operating in South Africa’s competitive hiring landscape, understanding and practising numerical, verbal and logical reasoning tests is essential — whether you’re shortlisting graduates for a bank graduate programme, designing assessment-centre batteries, or interpreting candidate psychometric feedback. This guide gives practical, free strategies, sample practice plans and recruiter-focused insights to improve test selection, administration and candidate evaluation.

Why recruiters must master these tests

Quick overview: Test types, what they measure and how employers use them

Test Type What it measures Typical item style Time pressure Common SA usage
Numerical Reasoning Data interpretation, basic maths, business numeracy Tables, charts, word problems High — 60–120s per item Banks, finance roles, graduate programmes
Verbal Reasoning Comprehension, critical reasoning, written communication Short passages + true/false/infer/choose best conclusion Medium — 60–90s per item Legal, HR, client-facing roles
Logical (Diagrammatic) Reasoning Pattern recognition, abstract problem solving Sequences, matrices, shape analogies High — 30–90s per item Consulting, analytics, technical selection

(Use these mappings when you decide which tests to include in a selection battery.)

Free practice strategies recruiters can use (and recommend to candidates)

  1. Start with diagnostic testing
    • Take or send a free timed mini-test (10–15 items) to establish baseline levels. This identifies candidate groups who need further selection steps (e.g., interviews or assessment centres).
  2. Simulate exact timing
  3. Teach common shortcut techniques
    • Back-solving, estimating, elimination, and spotting distractors in verbal items.
  4. Use paired practise sessions
    • Mix one numerical + one verbal + one logical set daily to build transfer skills.
  5. Review errors deeply
    • For each wrong item note whether the problem was content, speed, careless error or misinterpretation.
  6. Offer role-specific practice

Free online resources and local providers

Practical test administration tips for SA recruiters

  • Standardise instructions: Give identical instructions to all candidates to avoid bias.
  • Pilot with a representative sample: Run a pilot for new tests and calibrate cut-off scores against known hires.
  • Combine methods: Use psychometrics + an in-centre exercise to validate capability — see the Assessment Centre Day Playbook.
  • Be transparent: Tell candidates what skills are assessed and provide feedback routes; consult Interpreting Psychometric Feedback in South Africa.
  • Account for language: If English is not first language, consider comprehension allowances or pre-screen language ability.

2-week recruiter practice plan (free, low-prep)

Day Focus Activity (30–60 mins)
1 Diagnostic 10 numerical, 10 verbal, 10 logical (timed)
2 Numerical shortcuts Practice percentages, ratios, chart reading (timed)
3 Verbal inference 10 passage questions + explain answers
4 Logical patterns 20 diagrammatic problems
5 Review Error log + mock shortlist decision
6 Time strategy Timed mixed set; practice skipping & returning
7 Reflection Adjust cut-offs & scoring rubric
8–14 Repeat with increasing difficulty Swap in provider samples (SHL/Thomas/local) and include 1 mock assessment centre task daily; see Mock Assessment Centre Exercises and Scoring Guide for South African Graduate Programmes.

Scoring, cut-offs and fairness — a recruiter primer

  • Use norm-referenced cut-offs where possible (percentile ranks) rather than raw scores.
  • For entry-level roles consider multi-stage filtering: low-stakes psychometric -> in-centre simulation -> competency interview.
  • Adjust for adverse impact: monitor group differentials (language, educational background) and apply reasonable accommodations.
  • Document decision rules and behavioural markers used in assessment centres: see What Top Employers Look for in Assessment Centres.

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

  • Pitfall: Overreliance on one test. Fix: combine numerical/verbal/logical with practical tasks.
  • Pitfall: Ignoring time management effects. Fix: simulate exact timings and interfaces during practice.
  • Pitfall: Misinterpreting score meaning. Fix: consult psychometric reports and Interpreting Psychometric Feedback.

Final checklist for implementing free practice programs

  • Provide standardised, timed practice sets for all candidates.
  • Train hiring managers on shortcut strategies and question types.
  • Record and analyse pilot data before rolling out cut-offs.
  • Link psychometric outcomes to on-the-job criteria and in-centre exercises (see Technical Tests in SA IT and Engineering Interviews for technical role alignment).

If you want, I can:

  • Create a 30-item, timed practice pack (numerical/verbal/logical) tailored for South African graduate roles; or
  • Produce a scoring rubric you can drop into an assessment-centre evaluation sheet.

Which would you prefer?