Hi all,
I took the ASTB last month and scored a 62 8/7/7. I spent about a month studying for it. Since I work full time, it was mainly on the weekends that I studied. For preparation, I used five different study resources:
- These flashcards: https://www.cram.com/flashcards/astb-aviation-nautical-information-test-anit-comprehensive-4718163 They really helped me perform well on the aviation and nautical knowledge sections of the test. I made real life flashcards of nearly every single virtual flashcard on that site.
- Kyle's ASTB study kit: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1AvPi5oH_h_13TGajDvflDWkftwXO8LS6 Kyle (you can find him earlier in this thread) got an awesome score, so why not learn from the best? Now, I didn't use Kyle's kit as much as I should, but the "Air Warriors Guide" underneath the "General Study Guides" section helped guide me in preparation for the math section, and I can confirm, it really does help!
- The UAV practice: DRAW THE COMPASS DURING THE EXAM. DO IT!
- The Mometrix OAR/ASTB-e guide. Now, this book was a little too easy for me, but provided a good foundation for understanding what I had to study.
- The ARCO GRE/GMAT Math Review. I specifically studied the sections that I knew that I was weakest in, namely the problems in the motion genre involving D=RT.
I struggled more than I should have during the UAV portion due to insufficient practice on my own time before hand with respect to rapidly turning the compass in the direction it was supposed to go and ended up getting quite a few questions wrong (I want to say like ~5 or more). Keep in mind I didn't practice this section at all in the month or so that studied for this exam. All I did was watch the UAV practice video listed above and make a half hearted attempt at doing the flash cards here:
https://www.proprofs.com/flashcards/story.php?title=_36014 . Regardless, don't make the same mistakes I did: Practice those TBAS UAV flash cards until you have them down cold or take some time during the exam and draw the full set of eight (8) compasses so that you are not busy twisting and turning the compass like I was on the test.
Dichotic listening was also somewhat of a struggle for me simply because I was worried midway through that test portion that I had mixed up the buttons for the left and right side. LOL. Anyways, be sure to read the instructions very very carefully for this section.
For emergency procedures, yes write them down!
Final note: My test crashed once, which required the procter to restart the exam from where I had left off. I additionally clicked the wrong answer on at least one question each on the math and reading sections because the exam froze up. Specifically, when I went to click my mouse on the answer that I had already chosen a bunch of times in rapid succession to try to get the exam to unfreeze, it suddenly jumped to the next question. Since I was clicking so fast to try to get the test to unfreeze, I inadvertently clicked an answer choice on the next question when the test suddenly unfroze and the question changed in the process and probably (almost certainly...) selected the wrong answer in the process. Don't be like me. If your answer to a question is already selected and the test appears frozen, just give it some time. If worst comes to worst, just tell your procter to restart the exam for you.
Good luck everyone. Now I'm off to handle my myriad medical nonsense. sighh...