Jorge Rangel
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- Jul 3, 2020
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I have taken the PE three times and failed. My next opportunity will be on 2021 but on CBT mode. Will it be more difficult?
take the @Zach Stone P.E. online course. His program is the best. Good luck!I have taken the PE three times and failed. My next opportunity will be on 2021 but on CBT mode. Will it be more difficult?
take the @Zach Stone P.E. online course. His program is the best. Good luck!
www.electricalpereview.com
Based on posting history, they are taking a Civil exam.If you’re taking the electrical exam, I can help share with you tips that I used to pass. Like you, I took the exam multiple times.
I am in the same boat as well. I will be taking the civil transportation exam.I have taken the PE three times and failed. My next opportunity will be on 2021 but on CBT mode. Will it be more difficult?
NCEES website says Civil PE Exam transition to CBT tentatively set to 2022. So I guess 2021 is the last (tentatively) of pencil and paper for civil.I am in the same boat as well. I will be taking the civil transportation exam.
GeotechnicalWhat exam are you taking?
I took Construction but I would HIGHLY recommend the EET Review courses for both Breadth and Depth.Geotechnical
I agree - You should make the morning the priority. Remember, everyone in the room is taking the same AM test regardless of their depth section. These questions have to be tailored to give everyone a fair shot at passing. The morning questions are "easier" in that respect. You should be shooting for, I'd say, a minimum 30 correct in the AM, but even upwards of 35. If you do well in the AM, it takes a little less pressure off the PM session where the questions are a little more involved.I suggest you spend more time on morning part. CERM is good enough to make you over 35/40 in AM. I didn't take any courses and I guess I had 39/40 or even 40/40. No matter how bad I was in PM, I passed.
That was exactly my strategy to pass the exam. My goal was 36 in AM and 20 in PM. I only tried to solve 20-25 in PM and guess others. No pressure in PM at all. I finished AM exam in 2.5 hours. I even stopped going back to check in last 30 minutes, because I was afraid of overthinking. There was only one I could be wrong because CERM doesn’t have lots of construction contents. AM was so easy.I agree - You should make the morning the priority. Remember, everyone in the room is taking the same AM test regardless of their depth section. These questions have to be tailored to give everyone a fair shot at passing. The morning questions are "easier" in that respect. You should be shooting for, I'd say, a minimum 30 correct in the AM, but even upwards of 35. If you do well in the AM, it takes a little less pressure off the PM session where the questions are a little more involved.
I believe the general consensus is about a 70% correct to PASS the exam. Obviously this number is fluid and total conjecture, but it seems to be the rough estimate. So that's 56/80 questions correct. Leaves a cushion of 24 problems you are "allowed" to get wrong. I'd imagine you'd be better served to have as many of those banked "wrong" answers at your disposal for the Depth session. Hell, lets say you got 36 in the morning. You could leave half the afternoon blank and only answer the questions you are 100% confident in and have a chance to pass. Take those 20 questions you don't "know", try to solve them. Can't figure it out? Guess. You're bound to pick up at least a couple answers that way.
Obviously, I would shoot to be higher than that minimum. I set a goal for myself to shoot of 60-65/80 correct. I think I accomplished/exceeded that goal, at least with the way I felt after the exam.
Remember, you don't need to ACE the test. You just need to PASS.
That was my game plan as well going in. At least, kill the morning and go into the PM a little more relaxed. I had every intention of answering every question but was prepared for a bloodbath of an exam as well and knew I'd have to adapt if needed. Obviously, I was prepared to "grind it out" if I had to. But in my opinion, I felt the PM session was fairly straightforward as well. I felt the EET course and binders covered the Construction concepts very well and the rest of the problems were pretty much look ups from the ACI/OSHA/MUTCD. I also feel like my professional experience with my company really helped in the preparation as well. Not sure what your "construction" background is, as it is a very broad topic. My company does a little bit of everything and subs very little out. So, in my working experience I've been exposed to a lot of different operations and situations that I feel really helped me on the exam as well for some of those "random" questions.That was exactly my strategy to pass the exam. My goal was 36 in AM and 20 in PM. I only tried to solve 20-25 in PM and guess others. No pressure in PM at all. I finished AM exam in 2.5 hours. I even stopped going back to check in last 30 minutes, because I was afraid of overthinking. There was only one I could be wrong because CERM doesn’t have lots of construction contents. AM was so easy.
You have done a wonderful work.Amazing, congratulations!!!My work experiences are very broad but shallow. I’ve never done any actual structural design using US codes. I’m almost a civil guy not structural. I chose structural depth because I’m running a structural engineering firm now. I’m a newbie with very good engineering concepts. The PM problems looked simple and straightforward but I couldn’t find the right pages in my books. It really sucks because I’m not familiar with all the structural codes. However, I passed with my strategy. I knew I had 80% chance to pass before I took the exam.
Could you please teach me your strategy?You have done a wonderful work.Amazing, congratulations!!!
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