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100+ Free BTEB Masonry Practice Questions

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Sample BTEB Masonry Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your BTEB Masonry exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1What is the primary purpose of wearing a dust mask while cutting or grinding bricks and blocks?
A.To prevent inhaling fine cement and brick dust particles
B.To improve grip when handling tools
C.To reduce noise exposure from power tools
D.To protect against electric shock
Explanation: A dust mask filters out fine airborne particles such as cement and brick dust that are released during cutting, grinding, or mixing, protecting the respiratory system. Masons regularly generate dust during these tasks, making respiratory PPE essential on site.
2Which item of personal protective equipment (PPE) most directly protects a mason's feet from injuries caused by dropped bricks, blocks, or tools?
A.Safety shoes
B.Safety goggles
C.Ear plugs
D.Dust mask
Explanation: Safety shoes have reinforced toe caps and durable soles that protect the feet from impact injuries caused by falling bricks, blocks, and tools, as well as from stepping on sharp objects. Safety shoes are listed in the BTEB masonry competency standard PPE range of variables.
3A mason working on a scaffold platform more than a few metres above ground should wear which additional PPE item to prevent injury from a fall?
A.Safety belt/harness
B.Apron
C.Dust mask
D.Wooden gauge
Explanation: A safety belt or harness, anchored to a secure point, is the PPE specifically intended to prevent or limit injury from falls when working at height on scaffolding. Construction competency standards list body harness/safety belt as required PPE for masonry work performed above ground level.
4What is the correct first action a worker should take upon noticing a hazard on the construction site?
A.Report it to the supervisor or authority responsible for safety
B.Ignore it if it does not affect their own task
C.Continue working and mention it at the end of the shift
D.Remove the hazard themselves without informing anyone
Explanation: Standard occupational health and safety procedure requires that hazards and risks be identified, assessed, and promptly reported to the responsible authority so they can be controlled before they cause an incident. Delaying a report or acting without authorization can allow the hazard to injure someone else in the meantime.
5As part of maintaining "fit to work" records under standard OHS procedures, what document should typically be renewed on an annual basis?
A.Medical certificate
B.Tool inventory register
C.Site drawing register
D.Requisition slip
Explanation: "Fit to work" records include a medical certificate that is typically updated every year, along with any accident reports, to confirm a worker remains capable of safely performing their duties. Maintaining these records is part of practicing occupational health and safety procedures on a construction site.
6A mason slips and falls from a scaffold platform due to a missing guardrail. Under standard hazard classification, the unsafe condition responsible for this fall is best categorized as which type of hazard?
A.Physical hazard
B.Biological hazard
C.Chemical hazard
D.Ergonomic hazard only
Explanation: A missing guardrail is an unsafe physical condition classified as a physical hazard, one of the standard hazard categories (physical, chemical, biological) listed in the BTEB masonry OHS competency unit. Ensuring scaffolding is properly guarded is a key control measure against this hazard type.
7In the 5S workplace-cleanliness method used on construction sites, what is the correct first step before items are arranged and marked for easy retrieval?
A.Sort — separate necessary items from unnecessary ones
B.Sustain — maintain the new arrangement long-term
C.Standardize — make the new arrangement a routine
D.Systematize — assign fixed locations for tools
Explanation: The 5S method begins with "Sort," where necessary and unnecessary items are identified so that clutter and waste materials can be removed before the workplace is organized further. Only after sorting can systematizing, sweeping, standardizing, and sustaining follow in sequence.
8Which PPE item should be worn when mixing wet cement mortar to protect the skin from irritation caused by cement's alkaline nature?
A.Hand gloves
B.Ear plugs
C.Safety helmet
D.Face mask
Explanation: Wet cement is strongly alkaline and can cause skin irritation or burns with prolonged contact, so hand gloves are worn to create a barrier between the skin and the mortar mix. This is listed as required PPE for mortar preparation tasks.
9A power drill on site is found to have a frayed and exposed electrical cord. What is the correct immediate action?
A.Tag it as unsafe, remove it from service, and report it for repair
B.Continue using it carefully for the rest of the shift
C.Wrap the exposed area with cloth and keep working
D.Pass it to another worker to finish the task instead
Explanation: Unsafe or faulty tools must be identified, tagged, and taken out of service immediately, then reported so they can be properly repaired or replaced. This prevents electric shock injuries and is part of standard preventive-maintenance and OHS practice for power tools.
10A mason regularly handles wet cement mortar with bare hands over many months without gloves. Which occupational health condition is this practice most likely to cause?
A.Chemical skin burns or dermatitis from cement's alkalinity
B.Hearing loss from noise exposure
C.Heat stroke from ambient temperature
D.Eye strain from poor lighting
Explanation: Wet cement is highly alkaline and abrasive, and repeated unprotected skin contact can cause chemical burns, dryness, cracking, and irritant or allergic contact dermatitis. This is precisely why hand gloves are listed as required PPE when preparing and handling masonry mortar.

About the BTEB Masonry Exam

The BTEB National Skill Certificate in Masonry / Building Construction certifies competence in bricklaying and general masonry work in Bangladesh under the National Technical and Vocational Qualifications Framework (NTVQF). The trade-theory component covers occupational health and safety, tools and drawing interpretation, mortar and concrete preparation, brick bonds and brickwork, paving, plastering, damp proofing and scaffolding, alongside a hands-on practical assessment.

Assessment

Competency-based assessment combining a theory paper (multiple-choice and short written questions) with a separate supervised practical test, administered by BTEB through affiliated technical institutes. Question counts vary by NTVQF level (NSC-I, II, III).

Time Limit

Theory papers typically run a few hours, with the practical competency test conducted separately under supervision. Confirm exact timing with your institute.

Passing Score

BTEB sets the competency standard, generally requiring a pass in both theory and practical components; written-paper thresholds of around 40-50% are commonly reported, but the definitive standard depends on your level and institute.

Exam Fee

Registration and assessment fees are set by BTEB and the enrolling institute and are government-subsidised but change periodically. Confirm the current amount with your institute. (Bangladesh Technical Education Board (BTEB))

BTEB Masonry Exam Content Outline

10%

Occupational Health & Safety (OHS)

PPE selection and use, hazard identification and reporting, workplace cleanliness (5S) and fit-to-work records.

9%

Tools & Equipment

Hand and power tools for masonry, correct use, preventive maintenance and safe storage.

7%

Drawing Interpretation & Measurement

Reading construction drawings, setting out center lines, levels, offsets and measurements.

8%

Masonry Materials

Brick classification and preparation, cement, sand quality and water quality for mortar.

9%

Mortar Preparation

Cement-sand mixing ratios, mixing sequence, consistency and working-time limits.

16%

Brick Bonds & Brickwork

Stretcher, English, Flemish and garden wall bonds, closers and bats, joint filling and course alignment.

6%

Paving Work

Base preparation, paving line alignment, cutting units to size and grouting joints.

12%

Plastering

Surface preparation, mortar application thickness, corner/jamb plastering and curing.

10%

Concrete Work

Concrete ingredients and mix ratios, formwork, reinforcement basics, compaction defects and curing.

6%

Damp Proofing & Waterproofing

DPC purpose and placement, flexible DPC materials and diagnosing rising damp.

7%

Scaffolding & Working at Height

Independent and putlog scaffolding, bamboo scaffolding, guardrails and fall-prevention practice.

How to Pass the BTEB Masonry Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: BTEB sets the competency standard, generally requiring a pass in both theory and practical components; written-paper thresholds of around 40-50% are commonly reported, but the definitive standard depends on your level and institute.
  • Assessment: Competency-based assessment combining a theory paper (multiple-choice and short written questions) with a separate supervised practical test, administered by BTEB through affiliated technical institutes. Question counts vary by NTVQF level (NSC-I, II, III).
  • Time limit: Theory papers typically run a few hours, with the practical competency test conducted separately under supervision. Confirm exact timing with your institute.
  • Exam fee: Registration and assessment fees are set by BTEB and the enrolling institute and are government-subsidised but change periodically. Confirm the current amount with your institute.

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

BTEB Masonry Study Tips from Top Performers

1Learn the brick bond patterns (stretcher, English, Flemish) and the terms header, stretcher, closer and bat first, since bond questions make up the largest share of the exam and later brickwork topics assume you already recognize these terms.
2Pair each theory topic with hands-on practice in the workshop, such as mixing a test batch of mortar, laying a small English-bond sample, or checking plumb with a plumb bob, since BTEB assesses practical competence alongside theory.
3Always observe workplace safety and use the correct PPE and tool for each job, for example a harness on scaffolding, gloves when mixing mortar and a masonry-cutting disc for bricks, as safe practice is tested and expected on every job site.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who awards the Masonry certificate and what does it cover?

The Bangladesh Technical Education Board (BTEB) awards the National Skill Certificate in Masonry / Building Construction through affiliated technical and vocational institutes under the National Technical and Vocational Qualifications Framework (NTVQF). It certifies competence in bricklaying and general masonry work, covering both trade theory and a hands-on practical assessment.

Is the BTEB Masonry assessment only multiple-choice?

No. BTEB uses competency-based assessment that combines a theory paper (with multiple-choice and short written questions) and a separate supervised practical test. This free bank focuses on the theory knowledge with 100 multiple-choice questions to help you revise.

How many questions are in this practice bank and what topics does it cover?

This free bank has 100 multiple-choice questions covering occupational health and safety, tools and equipment, drawing interpretation, masonry materials, mortar preparation, brick bonds and brickwork, paving work, plastering, concrete work, damp proofing and scaffolding.

What pass mark do I need for the BTEB masonry trade-theory exam?

BTEB sets the competency standard, which generally requires passing both the theory and practical components. Written-paper thresholds of around 40-50% are commonly reported, but you should confirm the definitive standard for your level with your enrolling institute.