Team 3Thirty

Can You Bring Notes to a Government Job Interview?

In this guide
INTERVIEW QUESTIONS - Team 3Thirty NSW Government job advice

In most government interviews, bringing brief notes is usually fine.

But there is a difference between using notes well and reading a script.

Panels want to hear your actual answer. They want examples, judgement and reflection. If you read long paragraphs, the answer can sound stiff and disconnected.

When notes help

Notes can help you:

  • remember key examples
  • keep STAR structure
  • avoid forgetting the question
  • track multi-part questions
  • manage ADHD or anxiety-related blanking
  • communicate clearly if you process under pressure.

What notes should look like

Use prompts, not scripts.

For example:

  • complaint handling – Service NSW – angry customer – de-escalated – documented – outcome
  • competing priorities – payroll deadline – manager escalation – triage – result
  • stakeholder issue – unclear brief – clarified expectations – delivered.

That is enough to jog your memory without trapping you in a script.

When to ask as an adjustment

If using notes is connected to a disability-related barrier, you can name it as part of your adjustment request.

> I would like to refer to brief notes during the interview to support memory and organisation of examples.

Simple.

Useful next steps

If this topic is relevant to your application, these related Team 3Thirty guides are the best places to go next:

Useful resources

These official resources are worth checking if you need the source guidance behind the adjustment examples:

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