TehMightyEngineer
BRB Starting an Engineering Firm
I posted this for the PPI review course takers but wanted to share it here as well to see if people drew the same conclusion. I went through this forum and gathered as many failing scores as I could find to try to roughly determine the "cut score" that one could typically expect to see on the SE exam. Here is what I found:
On the NCEES website, under "grading", they state the following:
"When an exam is introduced or when its specifications change, a committee of subject-matter experts works with experienced psychometricians (testing experts with a background in statistics) to determine the level of performance that corresponds with minimal competence in that discipline. This becomes the passing score. NCEES does not publish passing scores because they change with each administration. NCEES scores each exam with no predetermined percentage of examinees that should pass or fail. All exams are scored the same way. First-time takers and repeat takers are graded to the same standard.
For subsequent administrations of the exam, statistical equating is used to ensure that this level of performance is consistent across multiple administrations of that exam. Essentially, this means that while the numerical passing score may change with each administration, you are not disadvantaged when one administration of a particular exam is more difficult than another. This process accounts for the 8- to 10-week interval between an exam administration and the release of scores to member licensing boards.
Your exam results are determined by the number of items you answered correctly for the exam in its entirety. There are no minimum requirements for particular sections or topics within an exam. You are not penalized for incorrect answers."
Also note this:
"If the reviews confirm an error in a question, credit may be given for more than one answer."
So, some things are clear:
The following is my own conclusions, which are entirely based on interpretation of limited data and my own assumptions. I could be completely incorrect (but would like to think I'm close).
Based on scores people have reported after failing the SE exam I've developed the following conclusions:
The highest scores on the morning that still failed were the following:
On the NCEES website, under "grading", they state the following:
"When an exam is introduced or when its specifications change, a committee of subject-matter experts works with experienced psychometricians (testing experts with a background in statistics) to determine the level of performance that corresponds with minimal competence in that discipline. This becomes the passing score. NCEES does not publish passing scores because they change with each administration. NCEES scores each exam with no predetermined percentage of examinees that should pass or fail. All exams are scored the same way. First-time takers and repeat takers are graded to the same standard.
For subsequent administrations of the exam, statistical equating is used to ensure that this level of performance is consistent across multiple administrations of that exam. Essentially, this means that while the numerical passing score may change with each administration, you are not disadvantaged when one administration of a particular exam is more difficult than another. This process accounts for the 8- to 10-week interval between an exam administration and the release of scores to member licensing boards.
Your exam results are determined by the number of items you answered correctly for the exam in its entirety. There are no minimum requirements for particular sections or topics within an exam. You are not penalized for incorrect answers."
Also note this:
"If the reviews confirm an error in a question, credit may be given for more than one answer."
So, some things are clear:
- The cut score changes from exam to exam.
- There is no grading curve.
- The exams are graded so that the cut score reflects a consistent difficulty; easier exams will require a higher score to pass than harder exams.
- You are scored based on your combined performance on both the morning and afternoon of each day.
The following is my own conclusions, which are entirely based on interpretation of limited data and my own assumptions. I could be completely incorrect (but would like to think I'm close).
Based on scores people have reported after failing the SE exam I've developed the following conclusions:
- You need approximately 28-30 on the morning from what I can tell.
- If you have a good morning score then you likely need two "acceptable" and two "improvement required" scores for buildings, or two "acceptable" (one of these being the 2 hour problem) and an "improvement required" for bridges.
- If you have a less than 30 morning score then you likely need three "acceptable" and one "improvement required" for buildings, or two "acceptable" (one of these being the 2 hour problem) and an "improvement required" for bridges.
- As best I can tell, if you get an unacceptable on any of the afternoon problems then you will not pass. Perhaps if you have a near perfect morning score then you may pass but this would be hard to determine based on limited information.
The highest scores on the morning that still failed were the following:
- 35/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable
- 33/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable
- 32/40 - Acceptable, Improvement Required, Improvement Required, Unacceptable
- 31/40 - Acceptable, Improvement Required, Improvement Required, Improvement Required
- 31/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Improvement Required, Unacceptable
- 30/40 - Acceptable, Improvement Required, Improvement Required, Unacceptable
- 30/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable
- 30/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable, Unacceptable
- 25/30 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Acceptable
- 22/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Acceptable, Improvement Required
- 33/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable
- 35/40 - Acceptable, Acceptable, Unacceptable
- 31/40 - Acceptable, Improvement Required, Improvement Required, Improvement Required
- 28/40 - Acceptable, Improvement Required, Improvement Required, Improvement Required