Just found out I passed surveying. I studied with EET, and I think I've seen you post about using it as well. I think it was good about being complete, but didn't do a good job about presenting information and the course was not very polished. Sort of haphazardly put together, but it did have everything. I also did learn how to write programs into my TI89, which made certain problems (but not many) a bit trivial.for anyone who has passed surveying, please tell me how you did it. I have failed 3 times now
Anyway I feel like surveying came down more to being a collected test taker and having strong trig/algebra and unit conversions. Survey specific terminology and processes made the EET class valuable but I honestly feel like most of my prior math experience was doing all the heavy lifting in prep and sitting for the exam.
My testing strategy was to not skip problems as quickly as many classes recommend. I honestly work through >85% of the exam problem by problem and only skip if I know a problem will take forever or I get a way off answer that I know will take a long time to figure out what went wrong. I of course did some time checks at quarterly intervals and recall telling myself to kick things into gear around the halfway point. Ultimately, I had ~20 minutes left to go back and do the 4-5 I skipped or had a bad answer. That's how I like to do things, so take it with a grain of salt. I know some people skip problems frequently and go back to finish and that works for them.
Anyway I'm sorry to hear you didn't pass, I've seen your other posts and it sounds like you've put a ton of time in and know how to do everything. It's probably getting old to hear but maybe it's just a state of mind thing at this point. You might just need to go in there, maintain calm, and hit the problems you're strong in at a pace where you don't make small mistakes.