PTS assessment — what does the practical observation section actually involve on the day?
I've got my PTS assessment coming up in about 5 weeks and I'm fine with the written test but the practical observation component is the part I'm least clear on. I work on the infrastructure side and have done the lineside safety briefings, but this is my first formal PTS assessment so I don't know exactly what the observer is looking for beyond the obvious stuff.
I've been scoring around 82-85% on the written practice material which feels comfortable. The lookout responsibilities and working limits of approach sections are solid. Where I'm less confident is on the emergency procedures sequence — specifically the order of actions when an incident occurs near the track. I keep second-guessing myself on whether the line block or the evacuation call comes first in certain scenarios.
I've been using the PTS practice test bank and found a few questions on emergency response sequencing that I keep getting wrong. I understand the logic but under exam pressure I second-guess the edge cases.
For anyone who's done the full assessment recently — how long does the practical observation take, and is the assessor testing specific predetermined scenarios or is it more of an ongoing observation throughout a shift?
The practical observation at my assessment was about 45 minutes and the assessor had a structured checklist they were working through. It wasn't a full shift observation — more like a series of simulated scenarios where you demonstrate lookout positioning and emergency response. They told me in advance which scenarios they'd be covering.
Your written scores sound strong. Most people who fail PTS assessments do it on the practical side, not the written. Spend your last 2 weeks doing physical walkthroughs of your work area with the assessment criteria in mind — it makes the observation feel much less foreign on the day.
The lookout positioning requirements are very specific and the assessor will check your distance and sightlines precisely. Practice setting up your lookout position to scale, not just in your head. There's no partial credit for being approximately right on the distances.
The emergency sequence questions tripped me up too. The rule that helped me was: protect the person, stop the machine, then report. If you're in any doubt, reciting that order in your head during the scenario helps. The assessor wants to see decisiveness, not hesitation.