Just finished the CAAT for an apprenticeship program application. Wasn't sure what to expect but I'd been preparing for about 3 weeks, roughly an hour a day.
The math section hit harder than I thought. Fractions, ratios, and applied problems — not just basic arithmetic. Vocabulary section was more about context and inference than memorizing word lists. Reading comprehension felt straightforward once I figured out to base answers strictly on the passage.
Overall scored 72nd percentile which got me into the program I wanted. If you're preparing, focus more on the quantitative reasoning than straight arithmetic.
I scored 68th percentile on my first attempt — enough to qualify but I wanted better. Retook 6 weeks later after focusing on the applied math and hit 81st. Percentile matters a lot for competitive programs.
The reading section time pressure surprised me. I ran out of time on the last two passages. Practice under timed conditions, not just accuracy.
Congrats on getting in! The vocabulary section is sneaky — they test whether you can figure out meaning from context, not whether you memorized definitions. Different skill.
Thanks for posting this, it's actually really reassuring to hear. I'm about three weeks out from my test date and just hit 74% on a practice set yesterday, which felt decent but I know I need to push it higher before the real thing. The math has been kicking my butt too, especially the ratio and proportion stuff.
I'm planning to sit the actual exam in the last week of June so I've got a bit of runway left. Honestly didn't expect to need this much prep for an apprenticeship entry test but here we are. Going to keep hammering the applied math and hope the vocab section stays as manageable as you described.
Thanks for this, super helpful. I'm actually in a similar boat — been prepping for about two weeks and just hit 74% on a practice set covering free caat problem solving questions. Wasn't thrilled with that score but it's definitely up from where I started, so I'll take it. The applied math is no joke, you really can't just wing it.
I'm planning to sit the real thing in about three weeks. Hoping to get my practice scores consistently above 80% before then. Did you find the time pressure was the hardest part, or was it more the content itself?
Congrats on getting through it! I passed mine about a month ago and honestly the single biggest thing for me was doing timed practice instead of just reviewing content. I'd been studying casually for weeks and felt fine, then did my first timed run and completely fell apart on pacing. The math isn't impossible, it's the clock that gets you. Once I started doing every practice session with a timer I stopped second guessing myself and learned to skip the ugly ratio problems and come back to them at the end.
For vocab I didn't do anything fancy, just wrote down every word I missed on practice runs and reviewed the list before bed. Maybe 40 words total by test day. A bunch of them actually showed up, or at least close cousins of them. You don't need 3 hours a day, you need your practice to feel like the real thing. That was the difference for me.
The wrong-answer thing is honestly what saved me. For the first week I was just grinding practice questions and checking if I got them right, and my score barely moved. Then I started forcing myself to sit with every question I missed and figure out exactly why my answer was wrong, not just what the right one was. Turns out I kept making the same two or three mistakes over and over, like flipping ratios and rushing word problems. Once I could name my errors, they mostly stopped happening. It's slower but it works.
Also don't sleep on the estimation stuff. I almost skipped it because it felt easy, then bombed a practice set and realized I was calculating everything exactly instead of rounding first. The caat numerical estimation and approximation 3 practice test was good for breaking that habit. If you review why your estimates were off, you'll get way more out of it than just retaking it for a better score.