UCAT Situational Judgement - Dr Admissions

UCAT Situational Judgement

Introduction

The SJT assesses how candidates respond to scenarios commonly encountered in healthcare, education and professional environments. Rather than testing academic knowledge, this section evaluates judgement, professionalism, ethics and interpersonal skills. These are all essential personal attributes required of a medical professional of the future. 

The SJT, unlike the other sections, are not scored from 300 – 900, but instead from bands 1 – 4 (with band 1 being the highest band). Therefore, medical schools utilise this section differently in terms of their selection process. Some universities completely disregard this section, choosing to generate a numerical cut-off based solely on the first three sections, other universities convert all sections into arbitrary points / scores based on distribution, and may provide more, less, or equal weighting to the SJT through this system. Many universities also flat out refuse to accept students with a band 4 in the SJT, regardless of their scores in the other section, making it important to do well in the SJT!

Free Situational Judgement Paper

What is the UCAT Situational Judgement Test?

The SJT assesses how well candidates understand real-world situations and how appropriately they respond to professional, ethical, and interpersonal challenges. Unlike VR, DM, and QR, the SJT is not testing academic knowledge or calculation speed. Instead, it evaluates whether you can recognise good professional behaviour in scenarios similar to those encountered in medicine, dentistry, and healthcare.

The SJT is made up of short scenarios followed by questions about possible responses or considerations. Each scenario usually describes a situation involving patients, colleagues, medical students, healthcare staff, surrounding the topics of confidentiality, professionalism, teamwork, honesty, or communication.

The SJT contains 69 questions to be completed in 26 minutes. There are generally 5 questions per short scenario / set, so this is actually a less time-pressured section compared to the others. 

The SJT is scored differently from the cognitive UCAT sections. Some questions may allow partial credit, meaning an answer close to the best response may still receive some marks. An,d instead of receiving a scaled score from 300 to 900, candidates receive a Band. Band 1 is the highest performance band, while Band 4 is the lowest.

Types of Situational Judgement Questions

There are two main types of question styles in the SJT. These are the “ranking appropriateness” and “ranking importance” questions. Amongst these, ethical scenarios are abundant, as well as the need for professional judgement

In “ranking appropriatenessquestions, you are given a possible action and asked to decide how appropriate it would be in the scenario. The response options range from very appropriate to very inappropriate. The key is to judge the action in context. A response may seem helpful in general, but if it breaches confidentiality, avoids responsibility, or fails to protect patients, it is unlikely to be the best option.

In “ranking importancequestions, you are asked how important a consideration is when deciding what to do. These questions test whether you can identify the key issue in the scenario – so subtly different from the “ranking appropriateness” questions. Important factors often include patient safety, consent, confidentiality, honesty, professional boundaries, fairness, and the wellbeing of others. Less important factors may include personal embarrassment, convenience, avoiding conflict, or protecting your own reputation. This is rather self explanatory.

UCAT Situational Judgement Tips

The grounding for ethics and professional judgement can be found in the GMC’s Good Medical Practice, and then these principles can be applied through practice in question banks

Use a professional decision-making approach. When answering SJT questions, think like a safe, ethical, and reflective future healthcare professional. Prioritise patient safety, honesty, confidentiality, respect, and appropriate escalation. This helps you avoid being distracted by emotional or irrelevant details.

Make sure to read scenarios carefully. Small details can change the answer. For example, whether a patient is at immediate risk, whether confidentiality is involved, or whether the person has already tried to resolve the issue can all affect the best response.

UCAT Situational Judgement Practice Test & Question Bank

Practice is essential for improving SJT performance because it helps you recognise recurring patterns. A good question bank should expose you to a wide range of scenarios and explain why each answer is correct or incorrect.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Many candidates lose marks in the SJT not because they misunderstand the scenario completely, but because they choose responses that are too extreme, too passive, or based on assumptions. Do not avoid contextual information in the specific scenario, these may completely change the correct answer. It is not always correct to choose the 2 extreme answer options, again context may inform a less extreme choice. 

Some candidates overanalyse scenarios and invent extra information that is not given. This can lead to poor decisions. You should answer based only on the information in the scenario.

Why Choose Dr Admissions?

For Situational Judgement support, Dr Admissions uses the EdUCATe™ method to help students move beyond guesswork and develop a clear, ethical decision-making framework. Students learn to Evaluate their current SJT approach, Design strategies for recognising professionalism, patient safety, confidentiality, teamwork and integrity issues, Understand how UCAT examiners rank appropriate responses, Consolidate learning through targeted scenario practice, Apply judgement under timed conditions, and Transform performance through detailed feedback. This gives students the confidence to identify the most appropriate actions and accurately judge the importance of different responses in complex clinical situations.

FAQ

Is there a difference between appropriateness and importance questions?

Also similar, there is a distinction between these two questions. One asks you for the action that is to be carried out, whereas the other asks to consider different components of a thought process before any action is taken.

How is SJT different from the other UCAT sections?

Unlike Verbal Reasoning, Decision Making, Quantitative Reasoning and Abstract Reasoning, SJT is not mainly about speed or logic. It assesses how appropriately you respond to realistic professional and ethical situations.

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