Tests are one of the most common things we'll go through in life, either pre-stated or impromptu. Tests are bound to happen either way, as they're deemed a process of vetting our previous works, activities, or knowledge, and the outcome always differs according to how well we perform. Today I'll love to share my experience with an impromptu test with you, and I hope you learn from my experience.
At the time of my employment in the place I presently work as a teacher, everyone who was employed at the same time was given a booklet that comprises everything we need to know about our duties and responsibilities as civil servants and some of the core knowledge about the state. On my way home that very day, I picked up the booklet and read it with the hope of getting acquainted with my responsibility as a teacher in the state and several others.
Most people didn't bother reading the booklet. I can vividly even remember someone making fun of me while we're in the vehicle heading home, staying that I'm the overzealous worker the state is looking for, while he on his own doesn't have time for such now, in as much as he already got the job, I couldn't blame him, or who would have thought we'd be called back into indulge in a test after passing the forms of interview and already being handed the employment letters?
Well, unfortunately for those who didn't study the booklet, just three days after we were given the appointment letter, we received a secular that we should all come for an impromptu test, which the employer forgot to vet during the process of our interview, although we later learned that the actual reason we were called back was because they'd employed beyond the maximum number of people they ought to, and in order to rectify that, they decided to put us, the recently employed staff, through another test to cut down the population.
Most of us don't know what to study or practice because we feel we've gone through the entire interview process. To cut a long story short, the interviewer also knew this and decided to bring out questions from the booklet we were given, and believe me, if you've not taken the time to read through the booklet, then you'll most likely fail the test because the answers required are not what one can easily use guessing to answer.
Before we started the interview, all the appointment letters we were given were collected back, and by the time each person concludes his or her test, you'll know within yours if you've failed or passed the test. Fortunately for me, all the questions I was asked were the ones I already read in the booklet, and that was how passing that test helped cement my appointment, unlike several others who lost their appointments due to their inability to provide accurate answers.
I can bet I saw the guy who mocked me three days earlier in a sorrowful mood after his test. It's not like I'm happy about his plight; instead, I'm excited that I didn't let his mockery put me off from reading or doing the right thing at the right time. I know how long I've longed for that position, and when I finally get it, the best thing I can do is get acquainted with what will make me become what my employer expects from me.
That impromptu test was a life lesson for meānever to take things for granted. If I hadn't taken up the booklet to read the content immediately we were given, I might not have had enough time to go through it later, and that's how I would have lost the golden opportunity to get my long-time desired job.
And that experience made me develop the habit of doing things at the nick of time so as not to bite my fingers in regret later on that, had I known, I would have done it earlier.
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That's about all I can say about my experience with an impromptu test; it was one that taught me a life lesson, and I'm hoping you'll learn from it.
Thanks for your time, stay bless.
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