Are the questions the same for the two attempts in Subject One?
2 Answers
If you fail the first attempt in the Subject One exam, the questions for the second attempt will be different from those in the first attempt. The Subject One exam consists of 100 questions, all randomly selected and combined from a pool of over 1,700 questions. The content of the Subject One exam includes laws, regulations, and rules related to road traffic safety, local regulations, road traffic signals, safe driving, basic knowledge of civilized driving, fundamental knowledge related to motor vehicle operation, and specialized driving knowledge for vehicles such as buses, trucks, and wheeled bicycles. The exam is scored out of 100, with a passing score of 90 or above. The questions are primarily presented in the form of case studies, images, animations, etc., totaling 100 questions with 1 point each, consisting of true/false and multiple-choice questions. The exam duration is 45 minutes. Important notes for the Subject One exam: Arrive at the exam venue early or on time, and enter the venue with your ID card and exam voucher. Sit in the assigned seat number. The exam is monitored by cameras that capture your face throughout the session, so ensure your entire face is clearly visible to the camera. Do not cover your face with hair, hands, scarves, clothing, etc., as this may result in a failing grade. The exam duration is 45 minutes, and the results are displayed immediately. If you fail, you can retake the exam once on the spot. If you choose not to retake it or fail the retake, the exam session will be terminated.
I just passed the written driving test (Subject 1) not long ago, and the questions in the two attempts can really be different. I was super nervous during my first try, missed a few questions and failed. When I took the second test, I found all the questions were completely new with zero repeats. The driving school instructor explained that the question bank is massive - the computer randomly selects questions for each exam to prevent cheating and ensure fairness. So don't count on memorizing previous questions to scrape by; you need to thoroughly study the entire question bank. My advice is to practice with mock exam software before each test to get familiar with various question patterns. This way, even if you fail the first time, you can handle the second attempt calmly. Remember, the driving test emphasizes mastering safety knowledge - the randomness of questions is actually good as it pushes you to comprehensively learn all rules.