Ask HN: Thoughts on wonderlic test for interviews
I had a company reach out to me about a job and they mentioned part of their hiring process involves taking a wonderlic test. I've never heard of them(the tests or the company) before this. Does anyone have any experience taking one for a software dev job?
What should a good score be for someone taking this test? I see numbers all over the place online. The first try at it on a practice test I got a 20/50 and didn't finish all the questions in the allotted time.
10 comments
[ 2.1 ms ] story [ 16.8 ms ] threadJust to give you an idea, this is the exact same test they give to NFL players during the combine.
You can save yourself some time and decline the interview.
They intentionally designed the test so that you can't finish it in the allotted time.
Instead of studying for interviews, focus on something useful, like learning a new language or framework.
Second, not everybody needs to practice for some stupid IQ test. Only the would-be false negatives (bad time-sensitive test takers) benefit from practice. IQ tests are a very good way of evaluating applicants. The Wonderlic test might not be the best choice, since it's calibrated towards people of average intelligence and towards more menial facets of cognitive ability, but maybe the company applies the test across all its hiring positions. Maybe ten minutes of its interview process are suboptimal. Of all the reasons not to work at a company, that's a really bad one.
Also, programmers aren't such special people that they have the right to feel insulted for being presented with a ten-minute intelligence test that has the gall to be calibrated towards the average population.
Also, I'm saying that, if an employer uses the Wonderlic test (or any other 3rd party test), it's negatively correlated with being a good job, based on my experience and evaluating other factors of the interview.