PPI also lists rates back to 2013: https://ppi2pass.com/pe-exam/resources/pe-exam-pass-ratesGo to April 18' and search 'pass rate'. There is a topic listed there and has several for reference.
PPI also lists rates back to 2013: https://ppi2pass.com/pe-exam/resources/pe-exam-pass-ratesGo to April 18' and search 'pass rate'. There is a topic listed there and has several for reference.
It’s an overall 44% passing rate for construction! That’s crazy!Yeah, construction and water resources both down 5%. Ooof.
Thank you for the link. It's interesting to see that pass rates went 3-5% down across the board for civil engineering.PPI also lists rates back to 2013: https://ppi2pass.com/pe-exam/resources/pe-exam-pass-rates
No. That is true for PE Electrical and Computer. PE Software is an April only exam.Soz if you Re-took PE software and haven't gotten your official results yet: you failed.
I don't know, but this is exactly what I did lol. pass rates are... well.... making me more anxious. My damn state taking their time giving results!Forgive me if this is common knowledge but if one took Civil: Structural and failed but then passed Civil: Construction would they be considered "First Time Taker" or a "Repeat Taker" for the second go around?
I'm a retaker. 3rd time actually. I checked the pass rates before checking my outcome and i was almost positive I had failed. Went over to my dashboard, and at that moment I felt an amount of joy so high that I could only remember a few instance in my life that made me feel that way. It was over... I passed.The retakers for power .
It was my first attempt but I found the exam to be terribly difficult (and very unlike the NCEES practice exam). No idea how I managed to pass. I've seen people who scored 60% and failed.
I personally think CBT will be a *little* easier. Looks like pass rates went up for ChemE after the exam went to CBT.Environmental is down by 5%. How bad it's going to be in the next cycle being a CBT. Glad I passed.
First of all congrats!!The retakers for power .
It was my first attempt but I found the exam to be terribly difficult (and very unlike the NCEES practice exam). No idea how I managed to pass. I've seen people who scored 60% and failed.
I'm so sorry to hear thatFirst of all congrats!!
This was my second time taking the power test and I felt I did very well. I'm still shocked I didn't pass.
45 was my Raw score..
What's worse is I actually took a review course (Electrical PE Review) and put in hrs on hrs and still missed the mark.
I'm really not sure how to better prepare next time as I already felt I was doing well..
I am curious with regard to people who took the Pencil and Paper Enviro exam if they find the PE Environmental Reference Handbook on the NCESS website more or less dense than the sum total of materials that examinees have traditionally brought on the exam day.I personally think CBT will be a *little* easier. Looks like pass rates went up for ChemE after the exam went to CBT.
It's definitely a good resource, and I brought it with me to the exam; but the P&P exam is so broad that it definitely was not the only resource I used on exam day.I am curious with regard to people who took the Pencil and Paper Enviro exam if they find the PE Environmental Reference Handbook on the NCESS website more or less dense than the sum total of materials that examinees have traditionally brought on the exam day.
Ah okay. That leads me to believe that the CBT exam will be more narrow in scope.It's definitely a good resource, and I brought it with me to the exam; but the P&P exam is so broad that it definitely was not the only resource I used on exam day.
I brought it with me to the exam but didn't open it up. It's a good resource but you cannot answer theory questions with it. The number of theory questions might get reduced in the CBT and the difficulty like the FE exam. It's nearly impossible to pass the current PE exam format with just NCEES hand out.I am curious with regard to people who took the Pencil and Paper Enviro exam if they find the PE Environmental Reference Handbook on the NCESS website more or less dense than the sum total of materials that examinees have traditionally brought on the exam day.
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