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Cubiks (Talogy) Math Skills Examples
See practical Math Skills examples for Cubiks Talogy assessments and learn how to work faster, stay accurate, and manage timed questions well.
Math Skills practice for Cubiks assessments
This page focuses on the Math Skills part of a Cubiks assessment, where you may need to solve calculations quickly and accurately under time pressure. The goal is not to memorize one fixed format, but to become comfortable with the kind of numerical work that can appear in timed assessment sections.
Cubiks, part of Talogy, uses psychometric tests in selection and assessment settings, and numerical reasoning is often one of the core components. If you are preparing for Logiks Advanced or Cubiks Logiks General (Intermediate), this module helps you get used to the pace and to reduce hesitation when the numbers start moving quickly.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
What the examples are meant to show
The examples in this module are built around common math skills such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, exponents, square roots, and averages. In practice, that means you are working with calculations that test accuracy as much as speed.
A useful way to approach these examples is to first identify the calculation type, then choose the shortest reliable method. That habit matters in timed sections, where a careful but efficient approach is often better than trying to do everything in your head at full speed.
Because Cubiks assessments can combine speed and accuracy, the examples are best used to train calm pacing. Read the expression fully before solving it, and avoid losing time by jumping into the calculation before you understand what is being asked.
How to work through the examples efficiently
Start by checking the operation or operations involved. Some questions are straightforward arithmetic, while others include a small chain of steps, such as combining values before taking an average or applying a power or root.
When you practice, focus on building a routine that works under time pressure. Estimating first can help you notice obvious errors, and then you can confirm the exact answer without second-guessing every step.
If you are preparing for a timed assessment, use the examples to notice where you slow down. That might be in multi-step calculations, in handling fractions or decimals, or simply in reading the question carefully enough the first time.