100% agree. Absolutely worth it.Definitely @Zach Stone, P.E. Not sure if he will post his students pass rates but from I heard from all its definitely going to be high. I just took his course for 1 month and benefited a lot. Just go for it.
100% agree. Absolutely worth it.Definitely @Zach Stone, P.E. Not sure if he will post his students pass rates but from I heard from all its definitely going to be high. I just took his course for 1 month and benefited a lot. Just go for it.
I'd second this.I passed the exam 1st attempt with self study.
Primary study material was NCEES sample exam, Graffeo, Wildi, Power Systems Analysis (Charles Gross), NEC Handbook 2014 and Mike Holt (Electrical exam Preparation, useful to practice NEC questions) . I then later added three extra practice exams by graffeo, Wasim Ashgar (Study guide for PE) and PPI book by camara ( I bought the second edition its cheaper. I did not study from this book but used it as a reference. it has a good index to help search for things).
At the very end I bought the Engineering pro guides sample exam, this is a very good exam with well designed questions I would say with difficulty level similar to NCEES.
Halfway through my studies I started looking at the free videos available from the online courses, I found that in general they can be of use but basically cover the same material in the self study guides so instead I decided to invest in more the extra practice exams and reference books. None of them as far as I could tell cover the code books enough.
Whether or not you take a review course you still have to buy the reference books and code books, so I would suggest buy the reference books (starting with graffeo and filling the gaps with wildi and the ncees sample exam) and start studying if you then feel like you are getting stuck or don't know what to study or focus on buy the review course.
whichever route you take have an all in mentality
Good Luck
Thanks for your advice. I plan to go though the books path first and if i feel like i am lost then probably switch to online class.I passed the exam 1st attempt with self study.
Primary study material was NCEES sample exam, Graffeo, Wildi, Power Systems Analysis (Charles Gross), NEC Handbook 2014 and Mike Holt (Electrical exam Preparation, useful to practice NEC questions) . I then later added three extra practice exams by graffeo, Wasim Ashgar (Study guide for PE) and PPI book by camara ( I bought the second edition its cheaper. I did not study from this book but used it as a reference. it has a good index to help search for things).
At the very end I bought the Engineering pro guides sample exam, this is a very good exam with well designed questions I would say with difficulty level similar to NCEES.
Halfway through my studies I started looking at the free videos available from the online courses, I found that in general they can be of use but basically cover the same material in the self study guides so instead I decided to invest in more the extra practice exams and reference books. None of them as far as I could tell cover the code books enough.
Whether or not you take a review course you still have to buy the reference books and code books, so I would suggest buy the reference books (starting with graffeo and filling the gaps with wildi and the ncees sample exam) and start studying if you then feel like you are getting stuck or don't know what to study or focus on buy the review course.
whichever route you take have an all in mentality
Good Luck
@Mercy is awesome@Mercy Thanks for the advice. I just signed up for @Zach Stone, P.E. course. Really liking the boot camps so far. Very understandable.
I second that. I took the Ga Tech course and it's woefully outdated. The exam has also changed significantly. The biggest portion of the exam now is power protection.If you pass, then yes it is worth it. First time, I tried studying myself. Failed 42/80. Second time, I did the GT Course (wouldn't recommend) and Zach Stone's course. I passed. I spent aprox. $1400 on everything. To me, taking both (and purchasing books) was definitely worth it because I passed. Of course, my company reimbursed me but it's up to you.
I second every bit of this.I did not take an online course as part of my studying. It is a really personal thing as to whether that style of learning will jive with you. I ended up taking a very hands-on, reference-material-prep focused approach instead of a review course. I think a big reason for this was that the review courses I checked out at the time were monotone, lecture recordings focused on theory. If I could have found a course focused specifically on 'passing the PE exam' that was current, up to date, and not lazily created, I probably would have been a lot more likely to consider it.
On this forum, I have seen a lot of love for the Zach Stone material. I watched a lot of his youtube videos during my studying and he's clear and his videos are good quality. I used a lot of the Engineering Pro Guides material (books/exams) in my studying and liked his take/approach a lot. He now offers a review course, and I would probably check that out if I was currently studying.
Generally I would look for people who are 'participating' in the continued changes to the PE. There are some courses/materials out there that haven't changed for several years - those are probably outdated/low effort. I see Zach and Justin on here regularly, and I think they are keeping up with the changes to the exam content. This doesn't exclude others, btw, I am just pulling out two names I see a lot and have heard good things about. There could be others I don't know about.
Which way did you finally go with your studiesThanks for your advice. I plan to go though the books path first and if i feel like i am lost then probably switch to online class.
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