LyceeFruit PE
Woodchipped Voice of Reason
- Joined
- May 25, 2018
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So last spring, I re-organized my completed problems by approximate topic.
I did it too close to the test to really break it down further and create an index.
I'm looking to re-do my completed problems but I wondering if my method would make sense to me in the long run or now.
I currently have it broken out like this:
NESC problems
NEC motor problems
lighting
lightning & surge protection
transformers
motors
generators
T-lines
NEC grounding problems
power flow
etc
So motors end up being any non-NEC motor problem. same with generators. etc.
Some areas are really broken out, others aren't.
I'm wondering if it'd make more sense to organize it by problem set:
NCEES
Complex Imaginary Exam 1
Eng Pro Guide Full Exam
Eng Pro Guide Final Exam
etc.
And then the problems within each set are in numerical order & I can make an index like
"Parallel Transformers: NCEES prob X, Eng Prob Guide pro Y"
</ramble>
How do *you* organize your completed problems? What are subject categories you use?
Looking for ideas/inspirations!
(I realize what works for one won't work for others but I'm pretty sure my current plan isn't working)
I did it too close to the test to really break it down further and create an index.
I'm looking to re-do my completed problems but I wondering if my method would make sense to me in the long run or now.
I currently have it broken out like this:
NESC problems
NEC motor problems
lighting
lightning & surge protection
transformers
motors
generators
T-lines
NEC grounding problems
power flow
etc
So motors end up being any non-NEC motor problem. same with generators. etc.
Some areas are really broken out, others aren't.
I'm wondering if it'd make more sense to organize it by problem set:
NCEES
Complex Imaginary Exam 1
Eng Pro Guide Full Exam
Eng Pro Guide Final Exam
etc.
And then the problems within each set are in numerical order & I can make an index like
"Parallel Transformers: NCEES prob X, Eng Prob Guide pro Y"
</ramble>
How do *you* organize your completed problems? What are subject categories you use?
Looking for ideas/inspirations!
(I realize what works for one won't work for others but I'm pretty sure my current plan isn't working)