CASPer Test Prep & Coaching
Practice CASPer with someone who actually scored well on it
Everyone tells you CASPer can't be studied for, and honestly that advice has cost a lot of good applicants their cycle. The test isn't measuring whether you're a good person. It's measuring whether you can produce a structured, balanced answer to a messy situation in about five minutes, and that is absolutely something you can get better at with practice.
So that's what a session looks like. You work through timed scenarios in the same format as the real test, then we replay your answers together and figure out where you lost the thread, whether that's rambling through your opening, missing the perspective you were supposed to consider, or running out of clock on the last question. Most people know within two sessions exactly what their pattern is, and once you can see it, you can fix it.
What's included
- Timed mock scenarios in the real 2026 test format (video and typed)
- Line-by-line feedback on your typed responses
- A repeatable way to structure answers to ethical dilemmas
- Speed drills for the five-minute typed sections
- Strategy built around the quartile cutoffs Canadian schools actually use
Common questions
How long does it take to prepare for CASPer?
Most people see real improvement within two to four weeks of structured practice, so I usually suggest starting about a month to six weeks before your test date. That gives feedback enough time to turn into habit instead of something you're trying to remember mid-test.
Can you actually improve a CASPer score?
Yes, and I'd be suspicious of anyone who says otherwise. CASPer rewards fast, structured answers that consider more than one perspective, and both structure and speed are trainable skills. Practicing timed scenarios with someone giving you honest feedback is exactly how you train them.