Man, the guys at work are having a great time with this.The REAL fun has yet to begin around here.
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Another FE is taking his this October. They suggested to him that he carpool with me to Birmingham.
Man, the guys at work are having a great time with this.The REAL fun has yet to begin around here.
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Cheaper on gasMan, the guys at work are having a great time with this.
Another FE is taking his this October. They suggested to him that he carpool with me to Birmingham.
Seems everyone is focused on a course rather than focusing on what works for them. Personally, I did not take a formal course. I didn't want to spend the money, and also, no one knows me and my abilities better than I do. I will go on the record and say that no course will be a 100% lead pipe cinch guarantee for success on this exam, and if someone tells you that, I hope your BS filter is tuned! I can't speak from experience, but from what I've gathered, these courses are regurgitated material from session to session. This test is dynamic, not static. My first piece of advice to anyone taking the test would be, read the NCEES outline on their website and build your studying off it. Your weaknesses will become apparent, and from that point, you can adjust your study habits to mitigate/improve these weaknesses. The outline is clear and concise and will give you the topics that the next exam administration will cover. Will you see all of them? Who knows, but if it is on there, it is fair game. When I took the exam, I would guess that 95% of the material identified in the outline was on the exam.well lets keep talking about the exam. If you took school of PE, completed all complex imaginary problems, and reviewed everything twice, if you fail would you take another online course and what would it be?
Thanks. Your right. The first time I took the test and relied fully on the course material with a horrible instructor. The second time I prepared on my own using practice problems I failed at to build my understanding. Closer to the exam School of Pe offers their class so I took it again to see if anything changed. All instructors were new (no more Nieves who just reads slides and does not give you theoretical understanding of subjects). 2 were great, the other 2 not so much. That helped me to solidify fundamental theory of things.Seems everyone is focused on a course rather than focusing on what works for them. Personally, I did not take a formal course. I didn't want to spend the money, and also, no one knows me and my abilities better than I do. I will go on the record and say that no course will be a 100% lead pipe cinch guarantee for success on this exam, and if someone tells you that, I hope your BS filter is tuned! I can't speak from experience, but from what I've gathered, these courses are regurgitated material from session to session. This test is dynamic, not static. My first piece of advice to anyone taking the test would be, read the NCEES outline on their website and build your studying off it. Your weaknesses will become apparent, and from that point, you can adjust your study habits to mitigate/improve these weaknesses. The outline is clear and concise and will give you the topics that the next exam administration will cover. Will you see all of them? Who knows, but if it is on there, it is fair game. When I took the exam, I would guess that 95% of the material identified in the outline was on the exam.
From my point of view, I don't believe any course could prepare me in the manner I could prepare myself. For a lot of reasons, but namely, I had to cover the material (I could go at my own pace, use different approaches, etc.), prepare my materials (no course will do this for you, and no manual/book/binder is an all-inclusive resource... plus, you need to know how to use these resources) and focus my mind and keep my nerves steady. Some may disagree entirely and feel that a course is the way to go, but I do not for the reasons indicated above. Just my :2cents: , whatever that is worth.
Good luck and don't let the wait kill you! We've all been there, and boy, does it suck harder than a Dyson, but it's done. Enjoy springtime and let the dice fall where they may. If you're unsuccessful, you will know where you were weakest and how to improve the next time.
The biggest problem I see is that some of the people who take these classes are shocked after the exam that the class didn't cover that particular area or question.Seems everyone is focused on a course rather than focusing on what works for them. Personally, I did not take a formal course. I didn't want to spend the money, and also, no one knows me and my abilities better than I do. I will go on the record and say that no course will be a 100% lead pipe cinch guarantee for success on this exam, and if someone tells you that, I hope your BS filter is tuned! I can't speak from experience, but from what I've gathered, these courses are regurgitated material from session to session. This test is dynamic, not static. My first piece of advice to anyone taking the test would be, read the NCEES outline on their website and build your studying off it. Your weaknesses will become apparent, and from that point, you can adjust your study habits to mitigate/improve these weaknesses. The outline is clear and concise and will give you the topics that the next exam administration will cover. Will you see all of them? Who knows, but if it is on there, it is fair game. When I took the exam, I would guess that 95% of the material identified in the outline was on the exam.
From my point of view, I don't believe any course could prepare me in the manner I could prepare myself. For a lot of reasons, but namely, I had to cover the material (I could go at my own pace, use different approaches, etc.), prepare my materials (no course will do this for you, and no manual/book/binder is an all-inclusive resource... plus, you need to know how to use these resources) and focus my mind and keep my nerves steady. Some may disagree entirely and feel that a course is the way to go, but I do not for the reasons indicated above. Just my :2cents: , whatever that is worth.
Good luck and don't let the wait kill you! We've all been there, and boy, does it suck harder than a Dyson, but it's done. Enjoy springtime and let the dice fall where they may. If you're unsuccessful, you will know where you were weakest and how to improve the next time.
The ideas of what it is they are asking or the theories behind it all are what is important. Great.The biggest problem I see is that some of the people who take these classes are shocked after the exam that the class didn't cover that particular area or question.
The simplest way I was able to explain the test to non-engineers: There are a million possible questions you need to study for, pick 80.
No prep class or book is going to properly prepare you if all you do is take the practice test, score well and then think that you are ready. The ideas of what it is they are asking or the theories behind it all are what is important. You passed college, you should be able to do algebra. Why the intense focus on "doing problems"? My biggest hurdle was what formula do I use? Once I cleared that hurdle, I passed the test. Most problems on the test are fairly straightforward, once you cut through all the BS.
Taking a class or not is an individual choice. There is some merit to it, but if you rely on it as your only source for studying, then you might be disappointed.
Yep, agreed! I don't understand the "shock." If you're shocked after taking a course and struggling with the test, your approach was entirely insufficient. Having good materials and knowing how to use them, I would argue, is more valuable than any course money can buy.The biggest problem I see is that some of the people who take these classes are shocked after the exam that the class didn't cover that particular area or question.
The simplest way I was able to explain the test to non-engineers: There are a million possible questions you need to study for, pick 80.
No prep class or book is going to properly prepare you if all you do is take the practice test, score well and then think that you are ready. The ideas of what it is they are asking or the theories behind it all are what is important. You passed college, you should be able to do algebra. Why the intense focus on "doing problems"? My biggest hurdle was what formula do I use? Once I cleared that hurdle, I passed the test. Most problems on the test are fairly straightforward, once you cut through all the BS.
Taking a class or not is an individual choice. There is some merit to it, but if you rely on it as your only source for studying, then you might be disappointed.
I studied mist effectively by categorizing and copying every single formula I could find and organizing them according to the outline NCEES provides. This, plus a lot of 'examples' yielded good results for me.The ideas of what it is they are asking or the theories behind it all are what is important. Great.The explanation you have given seems to be the best among others. I have not yet appeared in a PE exam but I get it like this, scoring 100% in CI practice test is not a guarantee pass, but if you work out the theory behind whatever you do, yes it may be. True. Thanks.3 hours ago, Ken PE 3.0 said: The biggest problem I see is that some of the people who take these classes are shocked after the exam that the class didn't cover that particular area or question. The simplest way I was able to explain the test to non-engineers: There are a million possible questions you need to study for, pick 80.
No prep class or book is going to properly prepare you if all you do is take the practice test, score well and then think that you are ready. The ideas of what it is they are asking or the theories behind it all are what is important. You passed college, you should be able to do algebra. Why the intense focus on "doing problems"? My biggest hurdle was what formula do I use? Once I cleared that hurdle, I passed the test. Most problems on the test are fairly straightforward, once you cut through all the BS.
Taking a class or not is an individual choice. There is some merit to it, but if you rely on it as your only source for studying, then you might be disappointed.
I agree with you in the sense that if you have studied until your mind feels like it's going to explode then the main thing left is how well you've organized your material. I expanded my GA Tech course manuals with additional info from the internet and also re-tabbed. I also cross-referenced those sections with appropriate problems from CI, Spinup and NCEES sample test. Finally I meticulously prepared my note sheet over a two-week period. Just knowing where everything increased my confidence and prevented me from having panic attacks. Plus the info was further ingrained into my brain.I studied mist effectively by categorizing and copying every single formula I could find and organizing them according to the outline NCEES provides. This, plus a lot of 'examples' yielded good results for me.
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You are correct...I was stuck in the (old Texas) mind set that you had to be approved to sit for the exam which meant if you passed you were automagically licensed. Good call.I'm not sure if that note applies to *newly* licensed PEs, or not, but I think it would be a little unreasonable to expect that to happen, IMO.
Even if you pass the PE Exam, don't you have to submit an application to be licensed? In other words, passing the PE Exam does not grant automatic licensure, does it?
If that's the case, it could be another 4-6 weeks after getting your results before you're "official," which means you really only have about ~12 weeks to get 30 PDHs?
This leads me to believe that the note applies to those who were licensed in 2017, but not newly licensed in 2017.
So, I talked to him and I was way off - first, he took his PE Exam April 2016, not October. Second, he told me I should not consider him my friend....A friend of mine earned his last October...
Anyway, I'll ask him tomorrow.
The animosity between you two is hilarious.Next step would be a restraining order! ROFLHe also confirmed that he was exempt from the 30 PDH requirement for 2016 (the year he passed), but he does have to report 30 PDHs this year and then punctuated this summary with, "but you won't have to worry about it anyway."
Thoroughly deflated, I asked if he had to apply for licensure after he passed, or if his exam application served as his application. He replied, "I had to basically write a check for like 50 bucks to complete the application process. The PE Exam application provided the information needed by the State to grant licensure once they had my check."
I thought I was in the clear when he concluded with, "But I'm sure they dropped your application in the circular file once the results came in, you know?"
I was like, "Okay. Thanks - sorry I bothered you."
He was all like, "You suck. I'm changing my number."
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