The UCAT is designed to be a test of
aptitude and attitude, not academic achievement. The test's rationale is that the latter is already demonstrated by
A-Levels,
Scottish Highers,
ATAR, or
undergraduate degrees. It thus attempts to assess a certain range of mental abilities and behavioural attributes identified as useful. These mental abilities include critical thinking, logical reasoning, and inference. The UCAT consists of four subtests, including three cognitive tests and one testing professional demeanour. Each test has a time allocation as below: •
Verbal Reasoning – assesses candidates' ability to think logically about written information and arrive at a reasoned conclusion. The candidate is given 22 minutes, with 11 passages to read and 44 questions to answer in that time. •
Decision Making – assesses the ability to apply logic to reach a decision or conclusion, evaluate arguments and analyse statistical information. Question types include
syllogisms,
logic puzzles, interpreting
Venn diagrams and calculating
probabilities. The candidate is allocated 37 minutes to answer 35 items associated with text, charts, tables, graphs or diagrams. •
Quantitative Reasoning – assesses candidates' ability to solve numerical problems. The candidate is given 26 minutes to answer 36 questions associated with tables, charts, graphs etc. as information. The
situational judgement test is a different type of test from the tests above: •
Situational Judgement – measures candidates' responses in situations and their grasp of
medical ethics and capacity to understand real world situations. This section of the test is 26 minutes long, with 69 questions associated with 22 scenarios. The test is a computer-based, online test taken at a Pearson VUE centre near the candidate. Candidates are not allowed to bring external materials in to the exam. A basic calculator is provided on the screen, along with a laminated notebook and an erasable marker pen for taking notes. Most exam centres also provide earplugs, or if not, candidates can supply their own. The equipment and conditions vary slightly between different test centers. 1 minute and 30 seconds of reading time is given for each subtest except Quantitative Reasoning, which has 2 minutes. Including time to read instructions before each subtest, the test lasts a maximum of 2 hours (or 2.5 hours for the UCATSEN version of the test). Each of the UCAT subtests are in a multiple-choice format and are separately timed. There is also 2 minutes of warm-up time (to read general instructions on the whole exam) at the start. The test must be sat between July and September of 2024 by candidates who want to apply to member universities for entry in 2025 (or deferred entry in 2026). The test's format underwent significant changes after the 2024 test cycle for the 2025 test cycle and beyond. These included slight timing adjustments, an increase in the number of questions in the Decision Making subtest, and most importantly, the removal of the Abstract Reasoning subtest. This subtest assessed candidates' ability to infer relationships from information (normally shapes) by convergent and divergent thinking, using questions such as
Bongard problems. The UCAT Consortium cited historical data that candidate performance has increased and response times have decreased, indicating the subtest's "high coachability". Particularly, 90th percentile for the subtest increased from 820 to 880. The UCAT UK Consortium offered additional reasoning, with their analysis showing that the subtest has "lower predictive validity [for candidate performance in university] than the other sections", citing several studies. ==Content and preparation==