Adaptive computer test from arithmetic to college-level math. A core OAR subtest for Navy and Marine Corps aviation selection.
The Math Skills Test (MST) is one of three subtests that form the OAR (Officer Aptitude Rating) — the primary screening score for all Navy and Marine Corps officer programs. It uses Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT): answer correctly and the next question gets harder; answer incorrectly and it gets easier. Your score reflects the difficulty level you sustained, not just the number correct. Topics range from basic arithmetic through algebra, geometry, and introductory college-level math. No calculator is allowed.
Sample questions from our ASTB-E Math Skills practice tests. Each question comes with a detailed explanation so you understand the reasoning, not just the answer.
The Math Skills Test (MST) is the quantitative reasoning component of the ASTB-E. Together with Reading Comprehension and Mechanical Comprehension, it forms the OAR score — the single most important number on your ASTB-E for initial screening. Every Navy and Marine Corps officer candidate takes the OAR, whether applying for aviation, surface warfare, or submarines.
The MST is computer-adaptive, meaning the difficulty of each question is determined by your previous answers. Get one right and the next is harder. Get one wrong and it gets easier. This adaptive mechanism means every candidate faces a unique sequence of questions tailored to their ability level. Your final score reflects the difficulty you sustained, not simply how many you answered correctly.
Because the MST is adaptive, you cannot skip questions or go back to previous ones. Each question must be answered before the next appears. This makes time management and confident decision-making critical skills.
The MST contributes to the ASTB-E composite scores: OAR (directly), AQR (Academic Qualifications Rating), and indirectly to PFAR and FOFAR for pilot and flight officer selection.
| Questions | Variable (adaptive) |
| Time Limit | Not separately timed (part of OAR block) |
| Format | Computer-based, multiple choice (CAT) |
| Scoring | Based on difficulty level sustained |
| Adaptive? | Yes — difficulty adjusts to your performance |
| Composite | OAR, AQR (also influences PFAR, FOFAR) |
Key detail: Unlike the SIFT Math Skills subtest which has a fixed time block, the ASTB-E MST is part of the broader OAR section. The adaptive algorithm determines when the subtest ends based on your response pattern and the confidence level of your estimated ability.
The MST covers a wide range of mathematical concepts, starting at basic levels and scaling up based on your performance.
Fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, proportions, and order of operations. The foundation for every other math concept on the test. Strong mental math is essential since no calculator is provided.
Solving equations and inequalities, working with variables, word problem translation, systems of equations, and basic functions. Expect algebra to appear at mid-level difficulty and above.
Area, perimeter, volume of standard shapes, angle relationships, coordinate geometry, the Pythagorean theorem, and properties of triangles and circles. Diagram interpretation is frequently tested.
Probability, combinations, permutations, introductory statistics, sequences, and basic trigonometry. These appear at higher adaptive levels when you are performing well and the algorithm is testing your ceiling.
On the adaptive format, getting hard questions right matters more than answering many easy ones correctly. Each correct answer raises difficulty; each wrong answer lowers it. Your score reflects the difficulty level you sustained — so aim high and stay there.
The first several questions establish your baseline. Take extra care on early items since they have outsized influence on where the algorithm places you. A strong start puts you on a harder (and higher-scoring) trajectory.
Because the test adapts, spending too long on one question is worse than making your best educated guess and moving on. The algorithm will adjust. Dwelling on a single hard item wastes time and mental energy.
Area of a circle (πr²), Pythagorean theorem (a² + b² = c²), slope formula, quadratic formula, and basic probability (favorable outcomes / total outcomes). These appear frequently across all difficulty levels.
When stuck, plug answer choices back into the problem. This is often faster than solving forward, especially on algebra and word problems. The multiple-choice format is an advantage — use it strategically.
The Math Skills Test (MST) is one of three subtests that form the OAR (Officer Aptitude Rating) portion of the ASTB-E. It is a computer-adaptive test covering arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and introductory college-level math. The number of questions varies because difficulty adjusts based on your performance.
The MST uses Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT). Answer correctly and the next question is harder. Answer incorrectly and it gets easier. Your score reflects the difficulty level you sustained, not simply the number correct. You cannot skip questions or go back to previous ones.
Study from basic arithmetic (fractions, decimals, percentages) through algebra (equations, inequalities, word problems), geometry (area, volume, angles, Pythagorean theorem), and introductory college math (probability, basic statistics, sequences). The adaptive format means the test will find your level.
No. The ASTB-E is taken on a computer but no calculator is provided. Practice mental math, estimation, and shortcuts. Many questions can be solved faster with mental arithmetic than formal written computation.
The MST is critical. It is one of three subtests forming the OAR score — the primary screening metric for all Navy and Marine Corps officer programs. A strong OAR is the minimum requirement before your full ASTB-E battery scores (AQR, PFAR, FOFAR) are even considered.
Sharpen your quantitative reasoning with ASTB-E practice tests and study resources.