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Security Awareness & Social Engineering Practice Tests
New
Rating: 5.0 out of 5(1 rating)
100 students

Security Awareness & Social Engineering Practice Tests

Test phishing, password safety, device security, workplace reporting, and social engineering defense.
Created byP.J. Agness
Last updated 7/2026
English

What you'll learn

  • Recognize common phishing, scam, and social engineering warning signs before responding.
  • Apply safer habits for passwords, multi-factor authentication, account access, and device security.
  • Evaluate suspicious messages, links, attachments, login prompts, and requests for sensitive information.
  • Identify how attackers use urgency, authority, trust, fear, and curiosity to influence decisions.
  • Choose appropriate first steps when reporting suspicious activity or responding to a possible security incident.
  • Strengthen everyday security judgment for workplace, personal, and public online situations.

Included in This Course

300 questions
  • Passwords, MFA & Account Protection50 questions
  • Devices, Wi-Fi & Everyday Digital Safety50 questions
  • Social Engineering & Influence Defense50 questions
  • Phishing & Suspicious Message Recognition50 questions
  • Workplace Security & Incident Reporting50 questions
  • Final Security Awareness Review Exam50 questions

Description

Security mistakes usually happen before anyone realizes a real attack is underway. A suspicious message looks normal. A fake login page feels routine. A caller sounds confident. A rushed employee clicks before checking. This practice-test course is designed to help learners slow down, recognize common warning signs, and build better everyday security judgment.

You will test your knowledge across phishing, social engineering, password safety, account protection, device security, public Wi-Fi, workplace reporting, and basic incident response. The questions are written around practical situations instead of abstract trivia, so learners can practice spotting risk in the kind of scenarios they may actually face at work or in daily life.

This is an unofficial practice-test course. It does not provide an official certification, and it is not a substitute for employer-required security training. It is designed as a practical review tool for students, employees, managers, freelancers, small-business owners, and anyone who wants to improve their ability to recognize suspicious behavior, avoid preventable mistakes, and respond more carefully under pressure.

Each test is built to reinforce defensive awareness: think before clicking, verify before trusting, protect accounts, report suspicious activity, and avoid being rushed into poor decisions. By the end, learners should have a clearer sense of the habits and warning signs that support stronger personal and workplace security.

Who this course is for:

  • Beginners who want to improve their everyday cybersecurity awareness without needing technical experience.
  • Employees, managers, freelancers, and small-business owners who want to recognize phishing, scams, suspicious messages, and social engineering attempts.
  • Students and professionals who want practice applying security judgment to realistic workplace and personal online situations.
  • Anyone who uses email, passwords, online accounts, mobile devices, public Wi-Fi, or cloud services and wants to make safer decisions.
  • Anyone who uses email, passwords, online accounts, mobile devices, public Wi-Fi, or cloud services and wants to make safer decisions.