• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

NEW ASTB Overview

SeeUpHigh

New Member
Its so refreshing to know that people still root and help each other still. I'm taking my test this Friday at Port Hueneme. Very excited to finally get the ball going. Hopefully I'll do well and will get into the Navy soon!

Thanks for all the helpful links guys.
 

SeeUpHigh

New Member
Thanks for the kind words :)

Since I'm a Noob, I want to know why my recruiter has schedule me to take the MFAT instead of the ASBT. It seems to me that this test is geared more toward pilots and flight officers. I'm going to take it and see if I qualify, but is the test that everyone takes at first?

Thanks for your input...

Oh, I also bought 2 different review books "Master the Officer Candidate Test" and "Master the Military Flight Aptitude Test". I'm gonna study more of the MFAT one, but just wondering what the difference is.

A friend said that since I'm female, I can handle G-forces better and that may be a reason why they want me to go this route. But, who knows how credible that statement is.

***EDIT***
Found what I was looking for! But further input is appreciated
 

Kickflip89

Below Ladder
None
Contributor
Since I'm a Noob, I want to know why my recruiter has schedule me to take the MFAT instead of the ASBT. It seems to me that this test is geared more toward pilots and flight officers. I'm going to take it and see if I qualify, but is the test that everyone takes at first?

Sounds strange to me...is that the Air Force test? /shrug I haven't heard of the board not wanting ASTB scores for pilot / NFO. Sounds like a good question to ask your recruiter.
 

SeeUpHigh

New Member
Took the test last Friday....Didn't do as well as I'd like to.

The TIME is what Killed ME! Grrr....Gotta learn how to think on my feet quicker.
 

tpbrown

New Member
There's lots of conceptual physics, real easy. I highly recommend the ARCO book, see if you can find a link to the Gouge. Thats pretty helpful as well.
Be sure to study your spacial recognition. The section with the shore, ship, and horizon is pretty lengthy.

i got at 8-7-8. not too bad.
 

FDX

It's mind games!
There's lots of conceptual physics, real easy. I highly recommend the ARCO book, see if you can find a link to the Gouge. Thats pretty helpful as well.
Be sure to study your spacial recognition. The section with the shore, ship, and horizon is pretty lengthy.

i got at 8-7-8. not too bad.



What else did you use to study the math? The arco doesn't have that much in it.
 

FastMover

NFO
None
The questions on the test are all very similar to the few in the ARCO book. If you want to see more examples, buy a GRE study guide. It has lots of ASTB type questions and good explanations as well.
 

Slammer2

SNFO Advanced, VT-86 T-39G/N
Contributor
The math section of a SAT book will help out too. It doesnt really get much more complicated than that.
 

FDX

It's mind games!
Cool. I'm studying out of a Math SAT book and a book called Painless Math Word Problems right now. I'm aiming to take the test around late april so i can get my app in as soon as my eyes are six months post op.
 

MotoZuki

New Member
Based on the percentile ranking graph posted in the NOMI ASTB info guide, I assume that the test is based on percentile ranking and not raw score. For instance, if your score is AQR: 8 and PFR: 8, this shows up as the top 4% (very good score I would presume) and doesn't read as two 8's of possible 9's ( = two 88.9% scores... a high B but not super).

Just my thoughts.

Moto
 

tiger84

LT
pilot
If it's by percentile, it seems silly to not just list the percentile as the score. KISS, right?

It's scored by percentile and then translated into a stanine (1-9) score. It's the same way a lot of standardized tests are scored and makes comparing people a little simpler (i.e. comparing an 8 vs. a 9 rather than a 73rd percentile vs. a 67th percentile).
 
Top