It's not *that* bad.
The PE exam is a big career milestone. It makes sense that it will leave its mark on ones psyche for a while.
I like the acronym!
Sound pretty normal.
It'll be over by early/Mid June for most of you.
Definitely by August for those in PA, GA, and HI.
Sounds a lot like what happened to me the session I passed.
I "graded" myself during my second attempt. I'm a PRA guy so I'd give myself fractions of a point for each question based on how confident I was in my answer. I roughly had four categories of "points" after the AM and PM session. I felt pretty good going into lunch. I was targeting 75% and that's where I think I ended up after the morning session.
While one shouldn't speculate on the cut score, "75%" is likely a pass. Afternoon session wasn't as successful. My self-graded score when it was over was 70%. Way too borderline for my preferences. I spent a lot of time at the gym the following two months burning off the stress and the pounds.
It needs repeating that the cut score varies both within subjects (by discipline and if applicable afternoon depth) and for each session. Just because it was (hypothetically) 52/80 for (hypothetically) CE/WRE last session doesn't meant that it was 52/80 for every other exam last session. Nor would it have to be 52/80 for Civil/WRE this current session.
FWIW, we've seen a 56/80 fail a couple times. We've also seen possible cut scores in the high 40s or 50. There's no way to predict it. And even if one knew the cut score ahead of time, they wouldn't know how they did on the exam. Too many unknowns in that equation to solve it. My advice is to not dwell on it.
Problems are rarely if ever thrown out. If a problem is found to be flawed: i.e. typographic error, printing error, correct answer isn't there, more than one correct answer, etc.
Examinees may report the more obviously erroneous problems for investigation. And I'm pretty sure they do psychometric to flag problems with strange examinee answer patterns for a closer review.
As I understand it, if a problem is found to be in error then depending on the circumstance: anyone who answered it gets it right; or more than one answer is considered right.
IIRC it's not *that* common, and it happens maybe once a session. Examinees shouldn't hope for such a scenario to play out on a large scale to help their score.
The cut score is based on what the minimally competent PE would get for that selection of test problems. Yes, PEs and other SMEs take practice exams with those problems to establish a baseline.
It's not a set percentage across the board for all exams. The cut score is based on the difficulty of the combined problems in that exam.
I'm too lazy to retype the details so I'll point to the Oct 2019 WttS thread. Specifically and exchange between
@Chattaneer PE and I starting around:
https://engineerboards.com/threads/...period-welcome-to-the-suck.34504/post-7586881And it goes on for a couple of pages.
tl;dr His summary is: