Day 2:
AT-SAT Day! It wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. It was a computer-based test and it came in many parts.
The first part was called "flight strips." It wasn't a 'flight strip' in the normal sense of the idea, but rather it tested the applicant's ability to quickly search for numbers outside of a range. Many 'flight strips' like this would show up on the screen: U76/090 and the range of numbers would be something like 600-800. If the flight strip fell outside that range, then you would type in "090." Sounds simple enough but with like 25 of these things on the screen at any given time and the range changing every few minutes it was easy to screw up.
The next part was "letter factory." This 'game' tested the applicant's ability to multitask and short-term memory. The applicant had to sort colored letters into their proper boxes (four letters to a box: A, B, C, D), while watching out for wrong letters (if another letter showed up on the belt, you had to call "Quality Control" before it got to be too late) and reordering boxes. Then in the middle of everything it would cut to a series of multiple choice questions that asked you things like: "what color boxes did you use?" "which letter is closest to the cut-off?" and "what letter do you need to complete the green box?" If I got one of those questions right, I would be surprised.
The next part was "TRACON." It was a basic TRACON simulator where you'd accept handoffs and guide the planes to two "airports" and four "gates." You had your choice of Fast, Medium, Slow for speeds and 1-4 for altitudes. You can't have an airplane overfly an airport and sometimes the handoffs would appear right next to airport. Needless to say, I had many crashes!
Then the last part was a mini-psych test. This test turned out to be a 5-6 hour ordeal (breaking 1 hour for lunch).
On the plus side, this has no bearing on your career and is used for "research purposes only." That's probably government double-speak for "your score is going to be sent up the flag-pole and your future tower manager will know how bad you've done."
If you folks have any other questions, don't hesitate to ask!