IlliniWood
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- Oct 20, 2014
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As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
I'm glad the volume has been posted too because at my testing site in Philadelphia, the room had MUCH fewer people than thought there would be, and this was the same place where I took the FE and it was packed.
If all results are available according to the NCEES then why doesn't the NCEES website have my results posted? They are still only on PCS, but at this point that is good enough for me.As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
'cause NCEES hates us and wants us to be sad at Christmas.If all results are available according to the NCEES then why doesn't the NCEES website have my results posted? They are still only on PCS, but at this point that is good enough for me.As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
Because it is all a clusterf**k between PCS, NCEES, State education department and probably few other entities involved !!!If all results are available according to the NCEES then why doesn't the NCEES website have my results posted? They are still only on PCS, but at this point that is good enough for me.As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
NCEES waits on the state approval process. Some states let NCEES do the notification. Other's like Illinois, use CTS (others use PCS, etc.). Those non-NCEES states have to go through their own procedures to approve the results. They then send that information back to NCEES, at which point your NCEES page is updated. Blame your state at this point. I certainly did with Illinois for their 2+ day lag.If all results are available according to the NCEES then why doesn't the NCEES website have my results posted? They are still only on PCS, but at this point that is good enough for me.As far as the NCEES is concerned, all results are available.It's kinda mean that they can post numbers and pass rates while some are still waiting on results.
[SIZE=medium]I find it interesting that the civil construction rate is so low compared to other civil disciplines. Is that typical? [/SIZE]
I took the construction discipline for the exam this October and passed. The afternoon session had some of the toughest resource allocation problems I have seen. Also, I saw a mechanics/physics problem in the exam that was tricky and reminded me of my first year engineering course. Even the estimating problems were lengthy (not tough, just lot of calculations).[SIZE=medium]I find it interesting that the civil construction rate is so low compared to other civil disciplines. Is that typical? [/SIZE]
I don't know; this is the first time I've seen the pass rates split up by discipline.
If I had to guess, I'd say it may have something to do with how similar the exam is to our day jobs. The Structural exam, for instance, really wasn't all that different from stuff I do all the time in the office. There were obviously a few questions that the academic types just love, but much of it wouldn't have been out of place on my desk at work.
From what I can gather, construction engineers spend much of the day doing stuff that isn't on the exam. In a sense what they do is probably more akin to project management or project coordination; they don't necessarily run the calculations themselves, but they serve as intelligent liaisons and do much of the thinking work for the contractor. (Someone correct me if I'm off base; I haven't spent much time around construction engineers, so I'm not 100% clear on what they do everyday.) At any rate, their job doesn't necessarily prepare them for the types of questions that show up on the exam, so when it comes time to study they're almost starting from scratch.
Like I say, this is just a guess. I don't think anyone who graduates with any engineering degree is dumb, so I'm thinking there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for the difference in pass rates. A correlation between pass rates and how similar the questions are to your day job makes sense to me.
I passed the civil construction also. I felt like I aced the morning, but the afternoon was full of problems I hadn't seen in my study prep. FSU makes a great point about our day jobs. I do takeoffs and schedules all the time, but most of the other stuff on the construction exam I would rarely (if ever) encounter in my position.I took the construction discipline for the exam this October and passed. The afternoon session had some of the toughest resource allocation problems I have seen. Also, I saw a mechanics/physics problem in the exam that was tricky and reminded me of my first year engineering course. Even the estimating problems were lengthy (not tough, just lot of calculations).[SIZE=medium]I find it interesting that the civil construction rate is so low compared to other civil disciplines. Is that typical? [/SIZE]
I don't know; this is the first time I've seen the pass rates split up by discipline.
If I had to guess, I'd say it may have something to do with how similar the exam is to our day jobs. The Structural exam, for instance, really wasn't all that different from stuff I do all the time in the office. There were obviously a few questions that the academic types just love, but much of it wouldn't have been out of place on my desk at work.
From what I can gather, construction engineers spend much of the day doing stuff that isn't on the exam. In a sense what they do is probably more akin to project management or project coordination; they don't necessarily run the calculations themselves, but they serve as intelligent liaisons and do much of the thinking work for the contractor. (Someone correct me if I'm off base; I haven't spent much time around construction engineers, so I'm not 100% clear on what they do everyday.) At any rate, their job doesn't necessarily prepare them for the types of questions that show up on the exam, so when it comes time to study they're almost starting from scratch.
Like I say, this is just a guess. I don't think anyone who graduates with any engineering degree is dumb, so I'm thinking there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for the difference in pass rates. A correlation between pass rates and how similar the questions are to your day job makes sense to me.
Maybe we can get more insights from people who took the test second time around !!!
IMO, I would say a repeat taker, since you took mechanical again. Even states that license by discipline don't license down to the module level.Q: I previously failed the mechanical systems and materials, and passed this time taking the thermal fluids....was I categorized as a repeat or a first time? I was a repeat, but it was my first time taking the TFS depth.
Gah! and here I am still waiting for my state to notify me if I passed. Come on Minnesota!
Thanks!IMO, I would say a repeat taker, since you took mechanical again. Even states that license by discipline don't license down to the module level.Q: I previously failed the mechanical systems and materials, and passed this time taking the thermal fluids....was I categorized as a repeat or a first time? I was a repeat, but it was my first time taking the TFS depth.
Either way, congrats!
Only 12k test takers? I think there were 700 at my site alone, I figured it would be much more. Of course it does serve all of LA, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties. Maybe south OC + Riverside goes to San Diego site, but still that's >15.5 million people served by one testing site.
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