P Pizza Member Joined Sep 25, 2013 Messages 11 Reaction score 0 Sep 25, 2013 #1 I'm curious if the NCEES exam problems are grouped together by discipline the way the sample exam is.
I'm curious if the NCEES exam problems are grouped together by discipline the way the sample exam is.
ptatohed Licenced to Spell Joined Oct 27, 2010 Messages 3,745 Reaction score 735 Location Murrieta, CA Sep 25, 2013 #2 Pizza said: I'm curious if the NCEES exam problems are grouped together by discipline the way the sample exam is. Click to expand... Yes, they are.
Pizza said: I'm curious if the NCEES exam problems are grouped together by discipline the way the sample exam is. Click to expand... Yes, they are.
JMT Well-known member Joined Dec 22, 2010 Messages 153 Reaction score 10 Location Southern California Sep 29, 2013 #3 PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around?
PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around?
JMT Well-known member Joined Dec 22, 2010 Messages 153 Reaction score 10 Location Southern California Sep 29, 2013 #4 PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around?
PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around?
ptatohed Licenced to Spell Joined Oct 27, 2010 Messages 3,745 Reaction score 735 Location Murrieta, CA Sep 30, 2013 #5 JMT said: PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around? Click to expand... J, There is no order at all to the CA exams. They will sometimes show you a diagram that is to be used for the next two problems, but that's as close as they come to having any like-topic questions in a row.
JMT said: PT, do you know if that holds true for the California Seismic and Surveying Exams? Or do they jump around? Click to expand... J, There is no order at all to the CA exams. They will sometimes show you a diagram that is to be used for the next two problems, but that's as close as they come to having any like-topic questions in a row.
JMT Well-known member Joined Dec 22, 2010 Messages 153 Reaction score 10 Location Southern California Sep 30, 2013 #6 Thanks for the info (again)!
P Pizza Member Joined Sep 25, 2013 Messages 11 Reaction score 0 Sep 30, 2013 #7 Thank you! thats very good to know!