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RAF - Any useful tips for OASC?


Sheefa

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Hi all,

 

As you may know, I've applyied to the RAF for an Officer comission. Things are going well at the moment, (building up my fitness again after my relaxing holiday! ;)) and I'm booked in for a final interview soon. If successful, it's off to OASC (Officer and Aircrew Selection Centre) at Cranwell for my aptitude tests, fitness tests, leadership exercises, interviews......you name it they do it!

 

After my recent visit to RAF Honington and through speaking to some of the Officers there, I've picked up a few useful tips. However, as they say the more the better!

 

What I really need to concentrate on is my current affairs knowledge, military operations/postings etc overseas and domestic. Any good ways to do this apart from reading all the tabloids? I think the 'Week' magazine looks pretty good as it summarises the main headlines, but wondered if there's anything else? ;)

 

Any other tips guys would be greatly appreciated. This is my last chance and I've been wanting this all my life!;)

 

Thanks,

 

Greg

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Greg,

 

This will cover the operational side as the RAF Regt are very similar to UK Army assets in terms of deployment scope etc.

 

http://www.army.mod.uk/

 

The magazine that you should be getting your head in is the Economist. It is a bit on the heavy reading-side but it covers everything you need for effective preparation for officer selection.

 

Regards mate,

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dont forget on your leadership exercise,that a good leader will listen to everyone and judge which is the best option or use a few to complete tasks and reward the guys for their effort,it always looks good too:d

 

current affairs is always a hard one as it changes constantly so the news is your best bet mate good luck with it and per ardua

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I did OASC when I was younger.

Don't worry about the aptitude tests. There's not really anything you can do to prepare for them. I suppose at the most you could try to practice digital recall, by reading the phone book, looking at a number for a few seconds, and then writing it down without making any mistakes.

 

Just be yourself, make sure you have read up on current afairs (remember it's depth as well as breadth of knowledge that theyre looking for) and be polite and courtious to your fellow candidates, and all staff at all times. Don't be the first to leave the bar in the evening, but by the same token, don't be the last.

 

You'll probably also want to know your times tables quite well (there's a lot of the if an aircraft is travelling at XXX knotts, how long will it take to travel XXX distance)

 

I'm sure you'll do fine though.

 

Best of luck!

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