What happens to the loveable Taureii?!? :thankyou:It's those damn astrological engineers who predict the cut scores. Everyone knows people perform better near the Blue Moon, unless they happen to be a Taurus of course.
The cut score is the passing score.Gentlemen,
would you please explain to me what is the meaning of cut score?
also what is the passing score for the test?
thanks
Was there a session where EB figured out the cut score was 48?somewhere between 48-60
The test was pretty damn hard. In light of that, wouldn't the cut score seemingly be constant, since presumably fewer people would hit it by virtue of having harder questions? Or is it believed to typically be 60+, so 59 is actually lower than normal?He mentioned cut score was going to be 59/80
Yes, the Oct2015 civil-WRE had a cut score of about 46 to 48. This is based on the fact that I passed.Was there a session where EB figured out the cut score was 48?
yes@matt267 PE did you get any kind of result other than "pass", or are you referring to other people's fail diagnostics to determine that number?
Maybe... but it all depends on the score NCEES gives the Texas Board. Bottom line, if you don't have a 70 after the curve, you won't pass.Word in Texas is that because the exam was decoupled from experience the cut score is going to be much lower. You have all of the newbs fresh out of college attempting the exam. There was at least 3 times as many test takers this round. They are throwing off the curve big time.
Was curious about the effect this would have, I took the exam in Houston and was surprised by the number of fresh-out-of-schoolers there were. Have a hard time believing NCEES will radically alter the curve and compromise the difficulty of the exam if there really is that big a swing.Word in Texas is that because the exam was decoupled from experience the cut score is going to be much lower. You have all of the newbs fresh out of college attempting the exam. There was at least 3 times as many test takers this round. They are throwing off the curve big time.
NCEES determines this, not individual member boards. Also, I could be wrong, but as pass rates vary every year/cycle, I don't think they try to curve it to have 70% pass or whatever. I think they have subject matter experts take the exam and determine its difficulty, then subjectively assign a cut score. Otherwise pass rates would always be the same, when then aren't. Full disclosure, I could be 1000% wrong.Word in Texas is that because the exam was decoupled from experience the cut score is going to be much lower. You have all of the newbs fresh out of college attempting the exam. There was at least 3 times as many test takers this round. They are throwing off the curve big time.
My understanding is the the "cut score" is decided to reflect the number of new PE's they want to license, thus the "cut score" would be higher in a situation like that, I would think.Was curious about the effect this would have, I took the exam in Houston and was surprised by the number of fresh-out-of-schoolers there were. Have a hard time believing NCEES will radically alter the curve and compromise the difficulty of the exam if there really is that big a swing.
I actually made use of the new rule even though I have enough years under my belt. My decision to take the test was a bit of a "why the hell not" moment that occurred in between the TBPE application cutoff and the NCEES exam sign-up cutoff dates.
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