Good answer. Thank you.!Short answer is you don't.
With out some serious collaboration to find out the highest failing score in your specific discipline you took, you will know the highest score that failed and you will never know your score. Just be satisfied with a pass and I think someone else put it perfect. What do you call a doctor that gets all C's during his schooling and completes his residency.........Doctor!
Forgot to mention that I took the Civil/Structural test.If you're from Texas, you can check your score on the TBPE website.
I passed with a score of 70 which is probably super borderline passing. Someone failed with a 67. (Source: the Texas thread)
You mean 70% right? not 70/80If you're from Texas, you can check your score on the TBPE website.
I passed with a score of 70 which is probably super borderline passing. Someone failed with a 67. (Source: the Texas thread)
Update: I actually just talked to my coworker and he said my score of 70 doesn't mean it's 70%, but it's not 70 out of 80 either. Seems to be some kind of an arbitrary scale? I'm not sure how exactly it works, I'm a first time taker.You mean 70% right? not 70/80
I guess we shall just sit back and relax.Update: I actually just talked to my coworker and he said my score of 70 doesn't mean it's 70%, but it's not 70 out of 80 either. Seems to be some kind of an arbitrary scale? I'm not sure how exactly it works, I'm a first time taker.
All I know is that for Texas, they'll tell you "Score: ##" where typically the passing cutoff is 65-70 and there are people who score higher than 80.
Ok. thats for the passing score.You would need to collaborate with test takers from Texas. First, you'd need someone with a passing score of 70 (assuming this is the lowest possible). Then you'll need to find someone with a failing of 69 (assuming this is the highest failing possible) and then ask for their NCEES diagnostic and determine what their score was on there.
I know a pass is a pass. Easy to figure out. Well you spend well over 200 hours on it. It is a good reflection of your 200 hour work. I get to know yourself better with a score in terms of how efficient you were. So later you do better in terms of estimating hours or similar stuff.@YL-2017, no. And why should you (or anyone) care? A pass is a pass is a pass. Be grateful for that!
You won't later need to know for estimating hours......because you passed you don't have to do it again.I know a pass is a pass. Easy to figure out. Well you spend well over 200 hours on it. It is a good reflection of your 200 hour work. I get to know yourself better with a score in terms of how efficient you were. So later you do better in terms of estimating hours or similar stuff.
Go back to the state board and challenge your passing score.I know a pass is a pass. Easy to figure out. Well you spend well over 200 hours on it. It is a good reflection of your 200 hour work. I get to know yourself better with a score in terms of how efficient you were. So later you do better in terms of estimating hours or similar stuff.
Generally, it's 70% correct to pass. However, each exam is individually evaluated on it's level of difficulty, and each question is analyzed to eliminate any outliers. You may have answered 80 questions, but you may only be graded on 78-79, and then graded on a bit of a curve (anywhere from 68-72%) depending on an array of reasons.Update: I actually just talked to my coworker and he said my score of 70 doesn't mean it's 70%, but it's not 70 out of 80 either. Seems to be some kind of an arbitrary scale? I'm not sure how exactly it works, I'm a first time taker.
All I know is that for Texas, they'll tell you "Score: ##" where typically the passing cutoff is 65-70 and there are people who score higher than 80.
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