Civil Service (CSE)

Clerical Ability Reviewer for CSE Subprofessional Level 2026 Philippines

LisensyaPrep TeamMay 9, 20269 min read

Clerical Ability is the section that only appears on the Subprofessional level of the Civil Service Exam. With approximately 30 to 35 items out of 165, it tests practical office skills relevant to first-level clerical, administrative, and trades positions.

Unlike the more abstract Analytical Ability tested in the Professional level, Clerical Ability is concrete and rule-based. Master the rules and the patterns become predictable.


What Clerical Ability Tests

The CSE Clerical Ability section assesses your readiness for first-level office positions through three main skill areas.

Topics covered:

  • Alphabetical filing
  • Numerical filing
  • Spelling
  • Basic clerical operations

Calculators are not allowed for any clerical questions involving numbers.


Topic 1: Alphabetical Filing

Alphabetical filing tests your ability to arrange names, words, and items in proper alphabetical sequence following standard filing rules.

Basic Alphabetical Rules

Rule 1: Compare letter by letter from left to right.

Examples in proper order:

  • ABLE
  • ABLER
  • ABLES
  • ABOVE

When comparing ABLE and ABLES, the first 4 letters are identical. ABLE comes first because it has no fifth letter while ABLES has S.

Rule 2: For names, last name comes first, then first name, then middle name.

Examples in proper order:

  • Cruz, Anna M.
  • Cruz, Antonio P.
  • Cruz, Maria T.

The last names are identical (Cruz), so we compare first names: Anna, Antonio, Maria.

Rule 3: Identical names are arranged by suffix (Jr., Sr., II, III).

Examples in proper order:

  • Santos, Jose Sr.
  • Santos, Jose Jr.
  • Santos, Jose II

(Sr. comes before Jr., then numerical suffixes in order)

Filing Special Cases

Hyphenated names: Treat the hyphen as a single name.

  • Smith-Jones is filed as "Smith Jones" (one unit)

Names with prefixes (De, Del, Dela, Van, Mc): Treat prefixes as part of the surname.

  • Dela Cruz is filed under "D"
  • Van der Berg is filed under "V"
  • McDonald is filed under "M"

Filipino names with "y" (Maria y Santos): The "y" portion is treated as part of the surname.

Companies starting with "The": Ignore "The" for filing purposes.

  • "The First National Bank" is filed under "F"

Companies with numbers: Numbers come before letters.

  • "1st Avenue Bakery" comes before "Always Fresh Bakery"
  • Or numbers are spelled out: "First Avenue" comes after "Fifth Avenue"

Alphabetical Filing Practice

Arrange these names in alphabetical order:

  • Reyes, Pedro
  • Reyes, Maria
  • Reyes, Anna
  • Reyes, Antonio

Correct order: Reyes Anna - Reyes Antonio - Reyes Maria - Reyes Pedro

(Same surname, so first names alphabetical: Anna, Antonio, Maria, Pedro)


Topic 2: Numerical Filing

Numerical filing tests your ability to arrange numbers in correct sequential order.

Basic Numerical Rules

Rule 1: Smaller numbers come before larger numbers.

  • 100 - 250 - 1,500 - 10,000

Rule 2: Compare digit by digit when numbers have the same number of digits.

  • 234 - 256 - 289 - 312

Rule 3: For numbers with different digit counts, fewer digits usually come first when filing in ascending order.

  • 99 - 100 - 999 - 1,000

Numerical Filing Special Cases

Decimal numbers:

  • 0.05 - 0.5 - 5.0 - 50.0
  • (Move decimal point and compare)

Negative numbers: Larger absolute value goes first when negative.

  • -100 - -50 - -1 - 0 - 1 - 50 - 100

File codes with letters and numbers: Sort first by letters, then by numbers.

  • A-1 - A-2 - A-10 - B-1 - B-5

Numerical Filing Practice

Arrange these file codes in numerical filing order:

  • File 145
  • File 089
  • File 1450
  • File 14
  • File 145.5

Correct order: File 14 - File 089 - File 145 - File 145.5 - File 1450

(14 has fewest digits and lowest value; 089 = 89 which is less than 145; 145.5 is between 145 and 1450)


Topic 3: Spelling

Spelling questions present sentences with possibly misspelled words. You identify the correct or incorrect spelling.

Common English Spelling Rules

Rule 1: "i before e except after c"

  • Correct: believe, achieve, niece
  • Exception (after c): receive, deceive, ceiling
  • Exceptions to memorize: weird, leisure, foreign, height

Rule 2: Doubling consonants when adding suffixes

  • For one-syllable words ending in CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant), double the final consonant: stop - stopping, run - running
  • For multi-syllable words, double only if the stress is on the last syllable: begin - beginning, refer - referring

Rule 3: Dropping final "e" before adding suffixes

  • Drop "e" before suffixes starting with vowels: hope - hoping, bake - baking
  • Keep "e" before suffixes starting with consonants: hopeful, lonely

Rule 4: Changing "y" to "i"

  • When adding suffixes to words ending in consonant + y, change y to i: happy - happier, study - studied
  • Keep y when followed by suffix starting with i: study - studying

Frequently Misspelled Words

MisspellingCorrect

|------------|---------|

RecieveReceive
SeperateSeparate
DefinatelyDefinitely
OccuredOccurred
AccomodateAccommodate
EmbarassEmbarrass
WierdWeird
ConcienceConscience
BegginingBeginning
GovermentGovernment
IndependantIndependent
MaintainenceMaintenance
PrivledgePrivilege
RecomendRecommend
AcheiveAchieve
BeleiveBelieve
CalenderCalendar
CemetaryCemetery
ConciousConscious
ExistanceExistence

Filipino Spelling Rules

Common Filipino spelling errors:

  • "Mga" is the correct plural marker (NOT "manga")
  • "Ng" is used as a possessive marker (NOT "nang")
  • "Daw" is used after consonants (NOT "raw")
  • "Raw" is used after vowels
  • "Po" and "opo" are signs of respect (different uses, not interchangeable)
  • "Sariling" (NOT "sarile")
  • "Pamamahala" (NOT "pamamahalaan" in this context)

Topic 4: Basic Clerical Operations

Basic clerical operations include simple math operations applied to office tasks.

Counting and Tallying

Example: A clerk processed 47 documents on Monday, 53 on Tuesday, 38 on Wednesday, 62 on Thursday, and 50 on Friday. What is the total?

47 + 53 + 38 + 62 + 50 = 250 documents

Calculating Averages

Example: Using the data above, what is the average documents per day?

250 / 5 = 50 documents per day

Time and Schedule Calculations

Example: A meeting starts at 1:30 PM and lasts 2 hours and 45 minutes. What time does it end?

1:30 PM + 2:45 = 4:15 PM

Quantity and Inventory

Example: An office has 144 reams of paper. They use 12 reams per week. How many weeks before they run out?

144 / 12 = 12 weeks


Practice Strategy for Clerical Ability

Daily target: 20 to 30 clerical questions per day starting 6 weeks before exam.

Master the filing rules first. Memorize all alphabetical and numerical filing rules until they are automatic.

Build a spelling word list. Maintain a notebook of words you commonly misspell. Review weekly.

Time yourself. Target 30 to 45 seconds per clerical question. These should be quick wins.


Common Mistakes in Clerical Ability

Mistake 1: Forgetting filing rules for special cases. Hyphenated names, prefixes, and "The" all have specific rules. Memorize them.

Mistake 2: Misreading numbers. When filing 1,500 vs 15,000, look at the comma placement carefully.

Mistake 3: Falling for almost-correct spellings. "Definately" looks reasonable but is wrong. The correct spelling is "Definitely".

Mistake 4: Spending too long on one filing question. Filing should be quick. If you cannot decide in 45 seconds, mark and move on.


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