TGAT2-CRITICAL-LOGIC · TCAS Exam Preparation (เตรียมสอบ TCAS)
TGAT2-CRITICAL-LOGIC/11
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking
TGAT2 - Critical & Logical Thinking · 2022 · Variant 1
Relative difficulty
Analysis source: Council of University Presidents of Thailand (CUPT) / NIETS
Analysis aligned to the official syllabus and assessment design.
4.0 / 5
100
60 min
Conditional logic, data interpretation, and fast elimination of invalid reasoning patterns.
Cohort performance
Session statistics from official examination reports
Total marks
100
Duration
60 min
Session difficulty
4.0 / 5
Calculator policy
TGAT papers: no calculator unless stated. TPAT and A-Level papers: basic calculators allowed where specified in the official blueprint.
Key examiner messages
Top priorities from the principal examiner before you revise
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items.
Official blueprint: Verbal 20, Numerical 20, Spatial 20, and Logical 20 items, 80 items total in 60 minutes.
TGAT/TPAT score conversion uses Ti = 50 + 8.69031 * (raw - mean) / SD.
The blueprint gives equal item weight to the four reasoning domains, so preparation should not over-focus on numerical reasoning alone.
CUPT/NIETS blueprints at mytcas.com define item counts, timing, and competency weights. Blueprints are advisory — live papers may vary slightly in difficulty distribution.
Question difficulty map
How candidates performed on each question in this series
No data available in official reports
Assessment objectives
Skill and AO weighting from official examiner commentary
Skill weighting
Cognitive skills emphasised in official test design.
Deductive reasoning
Weight: 25100%Quantitative interpretation
Weight: 25100%Spatial manipulation
Weight: 25100%Verbal analysis
Weight: 2080%Time triage
Weight: 520%
Method marks watchlist
Where working, steps, or method marks were commonly lost
No data available in official reports
Recurring mistakes across years
Themes examiners flag in multiple recent sessions for this subject
Conditional logic: Affirming the consequent: if A then B, B therefore A. — Test only valid forms: modus ponens and modus tollens.
Numerical reasoning: Confusing percentage change with percentage-point change. — Write original value, new value, and denominator before …
Spatial reasoning: Treating a mirror image as a rotation. — Track one asymmetric corner through the transformation.
Verbal reasoning: Choosing a conclusion that is reasonable in real life but not supported by the stimulus. — Ask whether the answer must …
Pacing: Completing hard puzzle sets before easy direct items. — Do two passes: quick wins first, time-heavy arrangements second.
Question choice intelligence
Mean scores and popularity for optional questions (HKDSE electives)
No data available in official reports
Level exemplars
What candidate scripts at each grade level looked like
No data available in official reports
Grade & admission context
How marks relate to grade thresholds and entry standards
Official body
Office of the Higher Education Commission (OCSC) / NIETS
Grading system
CUPT TGAT/TPAT T-score: Ti = 50 + 8.69031 × (raw − mean) / SD; national mean Ti = 50
Scale band
Raw 0–100
Scale band
T-score 40
Scale band
T-score 50
Scale band
T-score 60
Deep insights
What top candidates did
Techniques and approaches examiners rewarded in this series
1. Use a 45-second rule
Eighty items in sixty minutes means the paper is a triage test. If the first method is not visible within 45 seconds, mark the item and return after completing easier reasoning sets.
2. Translate conditionals into symbols
Write A -> B, not A, not B, all, some, and none in the margin. Validity becomes easier to test when language is converted into structure.
3. Estimate before calculating
For numerical items, approximate the answer first. Estimation removes many distractors and prevents percentage-point and percentage-change errors.
4. Mark orientation in spatial items
Put a dot, arrow, or labelled corner on figures before rotating or folding. This separates true rotations from mirror-image traps.
5. Separate argument from opinion
For verbal reasoning, identify conclusion, evidence, and assumption. Attractive value statements are not correct unless they follow from the evidence.
6. Practise mixed sets
Do not revise by topic only. TGAT2 fatigue comes from switching between words, numbers, shapes, and logic, so practise full mixed blocks.
Command word playbook
How to match each command word to the expected response style
No data available in official reports
Time traps
Sections where candidates spent disproportionate time relative to marks
No data available in official reports
Syllabus traceability
Topics linked to questions and mark weighting in this session
Verbal reasoning
Official topic weighting
Numerical reasoning
Official topic weighting
Spatial reasoning
Official topic weighting
Logical reasoning
Official topic weighting
MCQ trap analytics
Commonly chosen wrong options from examiner commentary
No data available in official reports
Topic heatmap across years
Mark concentration by topic and exam year for this subject
Mark intensity
Verbal reasoning
Numerical reasoning
Spatial reasoning
Logical reasoning
Difficulty trend
How session difficulty has shifted across recent years
Paper comparison
Marks and duration breakdown across papers in this session
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking: Verbal, numerical, spatial, and logical reasoning
Marks you can still earn
Where valid approaches outside the mark scheme may still gain credit
No data available in official reports
Practise what examiners flagged
Target weak topics from this report inside the Revui app
Verbal reasoning
Official topic weighting
Practise in RevuiNumerical reasoning
Official topic weighting
Practise in RevuiSpatial reasoning
Official topic weighting
Practise in RevuiLogical reasoning
Official topic weighting
Practise in RevuiSelf-diagnostic checklist
Key actions before you sit this paper — copy and tick off as you revise
- 1Message
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items.
- 2Message
Official blueprint: Verbal 20, Numerical 20, Spatial 20, and Logical 20 items, 80 items total in 60 minutes.
- 3Message
TGAT/TPAT score conversion uses Ti = 50 + 8.69031 * (raw - mean) / SD.
- 4Message
The blueprint gives equal item weight to the four reasoning domains, so preparation should not over-focus on numerical reasoning alone.
- 5Message
CUPT/NIETS blueprints at mytcas.com define item counts, timing, and competency weights. Blueprints are advisory — live papers may vary slightly in difficulty distribution.
- 6Pitfall
Conditional logic: Affirming the consequent: if A then B, B therefore A. — Test only valid forms: modus ponens and modus tollens.
- 7Pitfall
Numerical reasoning: Confusing percentage change with percentage-point change. — Write original value, new value, and denominator before …
- 8Pitfall
Spatial reasoning: Treating a mirror image as a rotation. — Track one asymmetric corner through the transformation.
- 9Pitfall
Verbal reasoning: Choosing a conclusion that is reasonable in real life but not supported by the stimulus. — Ask whether the answer must …
- 10Pitfall
Pacing: Completing hard puzzle sets before easy direct items. — Do two passes: quick wins first, time-heavy arrangements second.
- 11Strength
1. Use a 45-second rule: Eighty items in sixty minutes means the paper is a triage test. If the first method is not visible w
- 12Strength
2. Translate conditionals into symbols: Write A -> B, not A, not B, all, some, and none in the margin. Validity becomes easier to test when
- 13Strength
3. Estimate before calculating: For numerical items, approximate the answer first. Estimation removes many distractors and prevents
Teacher briefing pack
One-page session summary for tutors and classroom review
2022 2022
TGAT2 - Critical & Logical Thinking
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items. Office of the Higher Education Commission (OCSC) / NIETS emphasises cond
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items.
Official blueprint: Verbal 20, Numerical 20, Spatial 20, and Logical 20 items, 80 items total in 60 minutes.
TGAT/TPAT score conversion uses Ti = 50 + 8.69031 * (raw - mean) / SD.
Conditional logic: Affirming the consequent: if A then B, B therefore A. — Test only valid forms: modus ponens and modus tollens.
Numerical reasoning: Confusing percentage change with percentage-point change. — Write original value, new value, and denominator before …
- Total marks
- 100
- Duration
- 60 min
- Session difficulty
- 4.0 / 5
- Calculator policy
- TGAT papers: no calculator unless stated. TPAT and A-Level papers: basic calculators allowed where specified in the official blueprint.
Session analysis
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items. Office of the Higher Education Commission (OCSC) / NIETS emphasises conditional logic, data interpretation, and fast elimination of invalid reasoning patterns.. Priority revision: Verbal reasoning, Numerical reasoning, Spatial reasoning, Logical reasoning. Eighty items in sixty minutes means the paper is a triage test. If the first method is not visible within 45 seconds, mark the item and return after completing easier reasoning sets.
Updated 2026-07-03
Paper breakdown
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking: Verbal, numerical, spatial, and logical reasoning
Top chapters
Exam structure insights
Marks by syllabus topic
Revision priority from official test-design weighting.
Mark accessibility
Estimated difficulty spread based on official design.
Conditional logic, data interpretation, and fast elimination of invalid reasonin
Paper structure
Official paper breakdown for this subject.
TGAT2 Critical and Logical T
100·10·100%
Official syllabus scope
TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking measures reasoning under time pressure through 80 items in 60 minutes: verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and logical reasoning, each with 20 items.
Difficulty verdict
Rated 4/5 for March–April sessions. Conditional logic, data interpretation, and fast elimination of invalid reasoning patterns.
What examiners measure
1. Analyse verbal arguments, assumptions, conclusions, and implications. 2. Interpret numerical information from tables, charts, ratios, percentages, and sequences. 3. Manipulate visual, spatial, and diagrammatic information accurately. 4. Apply formal logic, conditional reasoning, classification, and pattern rules. 5. Choose valid conclusions while resisting plausible but unsupported distractors.
Where the marks are
Highest-weight syllabus areas: Verbal reasoning; Numerical reasoning; Spatial reasoning; Logical reasoning.
Examiner notes & key calculations
- Official blueprint: Verbal 20, Numerical 20, Spatial 20, and Logical 20 items, 80 items total in 60 minutes.
- TGAT/TPAT score conversion uses Ti = 50 + 8.69031 * (raw - mean) / SD.
- The blueprint gives equal item weight to the four reasoning domains, so preparation should not over-focus on numerical reasoning alone.
- The paper is designed for discrimination through speed and accuracy, not long written calculations.
- No negative marking means strategic guessing after elimination is preferable to blank responses.
- Spatial and logical items often have the highest time cost; skipping and returning is an intended exam skill.
- Numerical reasoning may be solved with arithmetic and estimation; advanced mathematics is not the point of the paper.
- Paper 1: TGAT2 Critical and Logical Thinking · 100 marks · 60 min · Verbal, numerical, spatial, and logical reasoning.
Exam tips
Paper format
- Duration
- 60 min
- Total marks
- 100
- Weighting
- 100%
- Question types
- Verbal, numerical, spatial, and logical reasoning
- Eighty items in sixty minutes means the paper is a triage test. If the first method is not visible within 45 seconds, mark the item and return after completing easier reasoning sets.
- Write A -> B, not A, not B, all, some, and none in the margin. Validity becomes easier to test when language is converted into structure.
- For numerical items, approximate the answer first. Estimation removes many distractors and prevents percentage-point and percentage-change errors.
Common mistakes
Conditional logic
Affirming the consequent: if A then B, B therefore A.
How to avoid: Test only valid forms: modus ponens and modus tollens.
Numerical reasoning
Confusing percentage change with percentage-point change.
How to avoid: Write original value, new value, and denominator before calculating.
Spatial reasoning
Treating a mirror image as a rotation.
How to avoid: Track one asymmetric corner through the transformation.
Analysis is paraphrased for study purposes. Always verify against the official examiner report and mark scheme.