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GITP (PiCompany) Grids Practice Examples
Practice GITP grids with clear examples and similar situations. Build confidence in pattern recognition for matrix-style abstract reasoning.
How grids appear in GITP practice
GITP assessments often include abstract reasoning tasks such as matrices, figure sequences, number sequences, and, when listed in your invitation, analogies. This page focuses on grids, which are used to check how well you can recognize patterns in a structured visual layout.
A typical grid has nine squares arranged in a 3-by-3 format. One square is missing, and the task is to identify the figure that completes the pattern. Practicing with examples helps you get used to looking at direction, position, count, and change in a calm, systematic way.
Since the exact assessment content can vary, it is useful to prepare with the section that matches your invitation. Example-based practice can make the task feel more familiar before you start the real assessment.
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 example situations help you notice
The examples in this module are designed to train pattern recognition rather than memorization. You learn to compare rows, columns, and individual shapes so you can work out which element is missing.
In practice, this often means noticing one clear change at a time. A shape may rotate, move across the grid, change in number, or combine with another visual feature. Working through examples builds confidence because the logic becomes easier to spot.
If a grid looks unfamiliar at first, slow down and check the figures methodically. The aim is to spot the underlying rule before choosing the missing shape.
A simple way to work through examples
- Look across a row or column and identify what stays the same.
- Check what changes from one square to the next, such as position, direction, or number.
- Compare the remaining squares to confirm the pattern before selecting an answer.
This step-by-step approach helps keep the task manageable, especially when the figures are more detailed. It also reduces the chance of missing a small but important change.
With enough example practice, you become faster at separating the main rule from distracting details. That is useful in any GITP-style matrix task.
Practical examples of what to look for
- A shape rotates one step in each box while staying in the same position.
- The number of elements increases or decreases in a predictable order.
- Two visual features combine, such as a change in direction together with a change in placement.
These are the kinds of patterns that often appear in grid exercises. The exact figures may differ, but the way of thinking stays the same.
Using examples to train this process can make the assessment feel less uncertain. You will have a clearer routine for checking the pattern before answering.
Why example practice supports confidence
Example situations give you a safe way to learn the structure of the task before you face timed assessment conditions. That can make the first real grid feel more familiar.
For GITP preparation, this is especially useful because the assessment may include several reasoning sections. Practicing grids alongside related abstract reasoning tasks can help you stay steady if the format changes slightly.
If your invitation mentions matrices or another abstract reasoning component, focus your practice on that format first. Clear example work can help you build accuracy before trying to work faster.