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yeah. i was a bit late to the party for the PE game so i should be thinking about the SE soon. Just have to determine how soon, specifically.
Haha, what do you mean? I have 4+ years of experience in a state where you only need 2 years to take the PE (one if you have a master's).

Then again, I  did start my professional career in a state where I needed 4 years of experience before taking the exam.

 
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Haha, what do you mean? I have 4+ years of experience in a state where you only need 2 years to take the PE (one if you have a master's).

Then again, I  did start my professional career in a state where I needed 4 years of experience before taking the exam.
i have technically 8ish years of experience, but a different degree situation, so we're probably about the same in verified experience level. a lot of the people my age at my company took the SE this oct. my years of experience are muddy though because of the recession i jumped to do bridges then back to buildings but was really just structural BIM and then now i'm back in the building game. i'm basically a mess :D

 
so, according to david connor's schedule i should have started studying at the beginning of october to pass one half of the SE in april. 
Perhaps, I think it depends on your base knowledge. If you felt the PE STR depth was a bit of a challenge then you will definitely need that much time. As for the SE, I studied only 300 hrs, went straight for the Vert and Lat on a weekend in 2014, failed both. Signed up for the SE Vert Oct 2015 with another 300 hrs of study and failed again. I was a bit frustrated to say the least and signed up for the PE April 2016 and passed. I realized the PE tests your basic understanding of analysis and code. The SE tests your understanding of vague code exceptions and comprehensive structural analysis theory.

I will take the SE again when the kids are out of diapers. Might even get my structural masters degree first. Four kids under six and a heavy workload is not easy to put forth the time for that exam. My wife is an angel for her part. 

You have an advantage over my experience with the seismic, I had to learn that from scratch.

 
5 hours ago, thejulie_PE said: so, according to david connor's schedule i should have started studying at the beginning of october to pass one half of the SE in april. 
Perhaps, I think it depends on your base knowledge. If you felt the PE STR depth was a bit of a challenge then you will definitely need that much time. As for the SE, I studied only 300 hrs, went straight for the Vert and Lat on a weekend in 2014, failed both. Signed up for the SE Vert Oct 2015 with another 300 hrs of study and failed again. I was a bit frustrated to say the least and signed up for the PE April 2016 and passed. I realized the PE tests your basic understanding of analysis and code. The SE tests your understanding of vague code exceptions and comprehensive structural analysis theory.I will take the SE again when the kids are out of diapers. Might even get my structural masters degree first. Four kids under six and a heavy workload is not easy to put forth the time for that exam. My wife is an angel for her part. 

You have an advantage over my experience with the seismic, I had to learn that from scratch.
Yikes. That's why I'm worried I should try to study now and take them asap in case a family comes along at some point. But I didn't study really for the PE civil structural. Maybe 50 hours total? I'm terrible at studying though. So that's counting only hours that I was actually studying.

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I'm suddenly in waiting mode, too @leggo...waiting to hear about a job offer that would mean moving halfway across the country...waiting sucks.

 
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