First of all - keep at it and good luck. Never give up!
I passed it the first time by studying on my own, here's how I studied.
Here's a glimpse of what I posted below...
1) make a schedule
2) know your references and tab out sections you frequently use in practice problems - do not underestimate the importance of this.
3) read the CERM 1 chapter at a time, doing problems for that chapter in the same night. save your DEPTH for last
4) Do depth chapters in the CERM same as in step 3
5) Do NCEES practice test and evaluate your strengths/weaknesses
6) Study ONLY your DEPTH for the last 30 days before the test
7) Retake the NCEES test the weekend before the test
8) Study as much as you'd like the week of the test - I think studying this week is good for keeping info fresh and for confidence by knowing you're prepared.
9) Do not study the day before the test - gather your books and make sure you're packed. Take a 1/2 day at work.
10) Skip problems that you don't know immediately
11) Don't second guess yourself - but double check your work when you are done with the entire test.
12) Don't fret over a problem you don't know how to do - you probably are better off guessing on it and working on other problems.
13) Most of this test is time management, and knowing your reference materials. Most problems are not as difficult as they initially appear - READ CAREFULLY.
Things I'm glad I did:
- Got familiar with my references which helped me manage my time well during the test - I was not rushed
- Skipped studying things like continuous beam analysis and indeterminate structures - almost all the questions on these subjects can be determined using statics and logically eliminating answers on the test
- Read the CERM cover to cover - it helped a lot in the morning. It was easy IMO.
- made a schedule - it made me at ease knowing that I covered it all
- tabbed out my references
- saved my depth for last - I probably spent the last 45-60 days before the test, studying ONLY my depth. It was fresh in my mind. The afternoon test is not easy.
- did not get overwhelmed by questions that were not in my subject.
- Did and re-did the NCEES test. its more realistic than the 6 minute solutions and the other practice tests. They destroy your confidence
What I'd do different:
- Get to know ASCE7 more - the vast majority of the questions relating to a reference book were referencing ASCE7
- Don't spend as much time in AASHTO - they only asked 1 bridge question (which sucked cuz I'm a bridge engineer)
- I wouldn't spend as much time in the non-Depth sections. I found the morning portion very easy - I'm not lieing when I say that I may have got 95% in the morning session. There are a ton of easy points to gain in these sections. I'd still do each chatper in the CERM, but I would do more than 1 chapter a day in some subjects. They are simply too in-depth than what's needed.
- I wouldn't spend as much time doing Masonry Problems
- I wouldn't spend as much time doing Prestress concrete problems
- Read more carefuly during the afternoon session - fatigue was an issue
- Be more mindful of time in the afternoon - again, the problems are hard, and I caught myself going down bunny-trails that wasted time.
Here are more details....
- I made a schedule so that I could do one chapter a day (including weekends) in the CERM. Allotting an extra 45 days or so at the end so I can focus on things I have issues with. I STRONGLY believe in a schedule - it organizes your preparation and gives you confidence that you covered everything.
- Gather ALL of your references that are suggested on the test. Tab all of them out in a way that makes sense to you. Time management is HUGE on this test.
- I went through the CERM, doing one chapter a day from front cover to back. BUT I skipped my DEPTH portion of the book (structural)
- I read every page and did practice problems on each section the same day - this sometimes took 3 hours per night (i'm not kidding)
- At the end of a major section (geotech, fluids/hydro, construction, etc.) I took a day or 2 and did practice problems from each chapter to reinforce the chapters I just studied.
- After completing all of the CERM, except for my DEPTH, I went back to my Depth and did one chapter a day, plus problems, just like before. I did it this way because I wanted all of the DEPTH info fresh in my mind.
- Once the CERM was completed, I ended up with about 30 days before the test, I originally alotted 45 days, but we all miss a few here and there, or take 2 days to cover a huge chapter.
- After the CERM was done DO THE NCEES PRACTICE TEST!!! This gives you a great barometer of what your strengths/weaknesses are. That way you'll know how to best study for the next 30 days. Evaluate the test after you're done. This SHOULD be a confidence booster, as the NCEES test is not that difficult. DO NOT DO ANY OTHER PRACTICE TESTS - they are too hard and will kill your confidence.
- I used those 30 days to do practice problems in my DEPTH over and over and over again, focusing on my weaknesses from the NCEES practice test, but still covering other topics I was strong on as well. I did practice problems from 6 minute solutions. THeyre tough, but they'll prepare you. I had to cheat and look at answers to get clues frequently.
- The weekend before the actual test, I re-did the same NCEES test I took 30 days earlier. Some of it was review, but you should see improvement.
- I studied the week of the test - some people don't but I found that my confidence was shaken if I didn't study, so I studied only to keep myself at ease. I wanted to overprepare
- I specifically did questions that made me use references that I don't use at work - like ASCE7, IBC, WOOD manual, Masonry, etc.
- I know you're not supposed todo this, but the day before the test - I did briefly study some random topics that popped into my head - because I felt more comfortable knowing i looked at it incase it came up during the test (it didn't). Relax.
- During the test I relaxed, skipped ANY problem I didn't know how to start. In the morning I ONLY did structures problems to build my confidence. I made THREE passes through the test. Doing only ones I know, ones I think I know, and Ones I have no idea. By the end of the test, I only had to flat out guess on about 3 problems.
I could go on forever...