I’m Civil too, took the Construction depth.Just out of curiosity, what are everyone's disciplines in here? I'm a civil, geotechnical.
Last edited by a moderator:
I’m Civil too, took the Construction depth.Just out of curiosity, what are everyone's disciplines in here? I'm a civil, geotechnical.
Well, but that is not a score, that is the number correct out of 80. How they score it is a different beast, and information they don't share with examinees.I failed the Oct 2019 Power exam (pen and paper) and my diagnostic report shows my score out of 80, so it doesn't appear that any questions were thrown out. They may have just given you the point for the question that may have been erroneous.
Texas?I failed the Oct 2019 Power exam (pen and paper) and my diagnostic report shows my score out of 80, so it doesn't appear that any questions were thrown out. They may have just given you the point for the question that may have been erroneous.
This is true, but there still is no way to confirm that questions were actually thrown out. The failed Mechanical CBT exam diagnostic we were shown on another thread had the scoring shown out of 70, so that did factor in the deduction of pre-test questions.Well, but that is not a score, that is the number correct out of 80. How they score it is a different beast, and information they don't share with examinees.
Missouri.Texas?
Correct.I think that is not true and there is no logic behind it. It’s a typical survey, that’s it.NCEES sends a random sample of exam takers receive a survey about a week after the exam. It mostly asks questions about the exam site environmental conditions (noise, temperature, etc), and a few personal background questions like years since graduation, # of references brought into the exam, # of references actual used during the exam.
It is in no way reflective of how one did during the exam, nor will the results of the survey effect one's score.
Yes, but the legend is that if you get the survey before the results, that means you failed... Or something like that
Really , but what's the logic behind that
The point I'm trying to make is this: NCEES doesn't score ten questions on the CBT exams. For example, see my first FE results:This is true, but there still is no way to confirm that questions were actually thrown out. The failed Mechanical CBT exam diagnostic we were shown on another thread had the scoring shown out of 70, so that did factor in the deduction of pre-test questions.
Missouri.
Examinees shouldn't waste any time or bandwidth trying to figure out which are the "pretest items" or hoping that certain items will get thrown out. Not only is it a waste of time (see: cute score), but it might actually do harm if people skip the supposed "pretest items" on the exam when those items are actual scored exam questions.@LyceeFruit PE Thanks for clarifying! Based on that text, I agree with your take on it.
Now I'm just hoping the ones where I thought "What is this, I've never seen anything like this" were pre-test questions, lol.
P&P was 80 questions and 8 hrs. The CBT, depending on exam, is 80-85 questions and still 8 hrs, so it's not really that different.I'd hate to find out that I spent additional time on questions that didn't count when I could have spent that time on questions that are actually scored. Would be better if they would just score them all.
Yes, you're agreeing with me. On the CBT Exams, the diagnostic doesn't show the pre-test questions as scored. Just like the Mechanical PE diagnostic we were shown that shows 70 questions, not 80.The point I'm trying to make is this: NCEES doesn't score ten questions on the CBT exams. For example, see my first FE results:
View attachment 19821
That is 100 questions, not the 110 questions I answered.
So much this. It's really annoying.However the myth still remains as an urban legend - one that needs to go away.
My cute score is 100/80.(see: cute score)
We're just discussing the topic because it's a new concept to those of us who've just transitioned to CBT exams. I don't think anyone in the right mind would do this when taking an exam.Examinees shouldn't waste any time or bandwidth trying to figure out which are the "pretest items" or hoping that certain items will get thrown out. Not only is it a waste of time (see: cute score), but it might actually do harm if people skip the supposed "pretest items" on the exam when those items are actual scored exam questions.
I get your point. But it's a futile exercise like trying to figure out the cut score. And there's much better use of time than speculating on things we'll never be privy too.We're just discussing the topic because it's a new concept to those of us who've just transitioned to CBT exams. I don't think anyone in the right mind would do this when taking an exam.
Freudian slip?So much this. It's really annoying.
My cute score is 100/80.
Agreed entirely! We were discussing the NCEES diagnostics for the different types of exams, not trying to deduce anything about the pre-test questions. The pen and paper exam diagnostics include all 80 questions, regardless of whether or not all of them were used to provide a "score." The CBT exam diagnostics do not include the pre-test questions, and will appear to be out of 70, not 80. This is as far as we know on the matter, anything else is speculation.I get your point. But it's a futile exercise like trying to figure out the cut score. And there's much better use of time than speculating on things we'll never be privy too.
And to that last line, there are people who go to great lengths to do stupid **** so there is someone out there who would do it during an exam. Fish Guy is all knowing - they have a crystal ball - so I'd trust what they suggest.
We don't know that it's out of 70.and will appear to be out of 70, not 80. This is as far as we know on the matter, anything else is speculation.
The point was that:We don't know that it's out of 70.
We know that it's out of 70 for that one person, on one exam.
And that's why this whole exercise is futile. IMO, the number of pre-test questions will vary between exam disciplines and likely even between some other unknown (to us) things [I can't find the word I want so you get things]
While this is true, we still don't know how the scoring works. My assertion that a question was possibly thrown out still stands, due to NCEES' murky scoring methods.- Pen and paper exam diagnostics include all questions on the test, none deducted.
No tests...but Cloud is testy.There is a lot of circle talk going on here. Without the results or the diagnostic, there is only so much that can be gleaned, especially with the mix of CBT and P&P exams ongoing. I really just want pet pics. Pets don’t need to take exams and I think we should reevaluate that. This slob doesn’t contribute anything to society or to my household!
View attachment 19822
For sure. We'll never know exactly how the scoring works. My assertion was simply that "throwing out of questions" for scoring purposes is a different thing entirely from the pre-test questions and those not being included in the diagnostic reports for CBT exams.While this is true, we still don't know how the scoring works. My assertion that a question was possibly thrown out still stands, due to NCEES' murky scoring methods.
Enter your email address to join: