It seems like throughout the web and within this forum the overwhelming recommendation is to study 300 hours for the 8-hour Civil PE exam. I understand that this study number is high because this number is given as a “regardless of someone’s skill level if they study 300 hours they should most definitely pass” benchmark, but I feel that throwing out 300 hours as the optimal study time could be doing more harm than good, so from someone who just passed the 8-hour exam I want to put another opinion out there for prospective test takers which might help them with their quality of life while they are studying!
After walking out of the 8-hour WRE exam I felt very confident I would pass.
Walking IN to the exam, however, was a completely different story as I was acutely aware that I had only studied half of the time recommended. I was nervous and really lacking in confidence. During the months coming up to the exam I felt the pressure of knowing that I wasn’t dedicating enough time (or so I thought) to studying and there were many moments where it felt useless and I would resign to finishing studying early because I was too stressed. I had prepared for the test by studying ~150 hours, including ~28 hours which were watching the ASCE PE review webinar series (which I would not recommend, but that is another story). I took the PE 3 years after finishing my undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering and was by no means a stellar CE student.
People come into the PE exam with a huge range of experiences so shouldn’t the recommendation for study time reflect that? Maybe there could be a range of hours based on experience going into the exam:
100-150 Confident in material; solid understanding of fundamentals; good test taker; degree/career experience directly related to test material
150-200 Somewhat confident in material; good understanding of fundamentals; good test taker; degree/career experience directly related to test material
200-300 Not confident with the material; haven’t actively practiced engineering in a long time, degree/career experience only related to some of the test material.
300+ Not at all confident with the material; haven’t actively practiced engineering in a long time; bad test taker
What do you think about this? Are there other examples of recommended study times already out there that I missed which do a better job of describing the range?
After walking out of the 8-hour WRE exam I felt very confident I would pass.
Walking IN to the exam, however, was a completely different story as I was acutely aware that I had only studied half of the time recommended. I was nervous and really lacking in confidence. During the months coming up to the exam I felt the pressure of knowing that I wasn’t dedicating enough time (or so I thought) to studying and there were many moments where it felt useless and I would resign to finishing studying early because I was too stressed. I had prepared for the test by studying ~150 hours, including ~28 hours which were watching the ASCE PE review webinar series (which I would not recommend, but that is another story). I took the PE 3 years after finishing my undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering and was by no means a stellar CE student.
People come into the PE exam with a huge range of experiences so shouldn’t the recommendation for study time reflect that? Maybe there could be a range of hours based on experience going into the exam:
100-150 Confident in material; solid understanding of fundamentals; good test taker; degree/career experience directly related to test material
150-200 Somewhat confident in material; good understanding of fundamentals; good test taker; degree/career experience directly related to test material
200-300 Not confident with the material; haven’t actively practiced engineering in a long time, degree/career experience only related to some of the test material.
300+ Not at all confident with the material; haven’t actively practiced engineering in a long time; bad test taker
What do you think about this? Are there other examples of recommended study times already out there that I missed which do a better job of describing the range?