TAFE training is competency-based, which changes how you should prepare. You are not just answering questions; you are demonstrating that you can do the task to the required standard. So the best practice is doing, supported by the knowledge that makes the doing fluent. Confirm the specific units of competency with your TAFE, since they vary by course.
What is assessed
- Reading a program. Explain the moves and the common codes in context.
- Setup and operation. Offsets, tooling, and running the machine correctly.
- Producing to specification. A finished part that measures within tolerance.
- Working safely. Correct procedure throughout.
A practice plan
| Competency area | What to practise | How |
|---|---|---|
| Program reading | Narrate full programs | Sample programs, code recall |
| Setup and operation | Offsets, tool changes | Supervised machine time |
| Measurement | Calipers, micrometers, prints | Real tools, known features |
| Safety | Correct procedure | Follow shop and TAFE rules |
Code recall is the fluency layer
Because assessment is through application, you want the underlying knowledge to be automatic so your attention is on the task, not on remembering what G02 means. Drill the common G-codes and common M-codes using beginner CNC code practice, and for the broader skill picture see CNC machinist certification test prep. A free tool like G-Code Sprint builds the code recall; the rest comes from supervised practice.
Bottom line
TAFE CNC assessment is competency-based, so practise the actual tasks: reading, setup, producing to spec, and safety. Make code recall automatic first, then rehearse the hands-on work with your trainer. The UK runs the same competence-first philosophy through its own framework, covered in NVQ Level 2 CNC machining questions.
Sources
Frequently asked questions
What does a TAFE CNC machining assessment cover?
It is competency-based, so it checks that you can read a program, set up and operate the machine, produce a part to specification, and work safely. The common G-code and M-code knowledge underpins the reading portion.
How is competency-based assessment different from a written test?
Instead of only answering questions, you demonstrate you can do the task to the required standard. Knowledge still matters, but it is assessed through application, so practising the actual skills is the best preparation.
How do I practise for a TAFE CNC test?
Drill the common codes for fast recall, practise reading programs, and rehearse setup and measurement on a machine under your trainer. A free tool like G-Code Sprint covers the code recall the reading portion relies on.
G-Code Sprint is a study and practice tool only. It is not affiliated with TAFE and does not provide official assessment content. Always follow your instructor, employer, machine manual, and shop safety procedures.