Situational Judgment — Free Sample

A 5-scenario sample of the Situational Judgment family — workplace-judgment scenarios drawn from the situational judgment test (SJT) tradition (McDaniel et al 2001, Whetzel & McDaniel 2009). SJTs measure context-specific judgment with corrected validity around 0.34 across selection-research literature. Items are originally authored by AIEH editorial; they're not drawn from a copyrighted bank. For a verified Skills Passport credential, take the full SJT assessment.

1. A teammate has been delivering work that's 80% complete and 100% missing a critical detail you'd flagged twice. Your manager asks what's going on. The teammate has personal issues that affect their focus. What's the most-effective response?
2. Three high-priority tasks land on your plate in the same morning, all marked urgent by different stakeholders. You can finish one well today, two badly, or get partial progress on all three. What's the most-effective approach?
3. A customer is frustrated that a feature you shipped doesn't work the way they expected, even though it works as documented. They escalate to your manager. What's the most-effective response when the manager asks how you'd like to handle it?
4. You discover a colleague has been taking credit for a piece of work you led — repeatedly, in front of leadership, in ways that affect promotion-track perceptions. What's the most-effective response?
5. Your team is asked to ship a feature on a timeline you believe is too aggressive given the quality bar required. The product manager is pushing for the date; engineering leadership is supportive of pushback. What's the most-effective stance to take?