I've never heard of a state helping you decide which test to take.I took both vertical and lateral (buildings) in GA. There were 20 of us on day 2, but I suspect there were more that just took the vertical portion.
In GA, the state board selected which exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth or Structural PE) you could take based on the experience you submitted... Are other states similar? Or do some let you decide? That seems like it would make a big difference on the number of Structural PE exam takers in each state.
Of course I'm old enough they let me take which ever test I want as long as the check clears.I've never heard of a state helping you decide which test to take.I took both vertical and lateral (buildings) in GA. There were 20 of us on day 2, but I suspect there were more that just took the vertical portion.
In GA, the state board selected which exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth or Structural PE) you could take based on the experience you submitted... Are other states similar? Or do some let you decide? That seems like it would make a big difference on the number of Structural PE exam takers in each state.
Strange. Although an SE designation is not required to practice structural engineering in my state, there wasn't an option for me on which exam to take. Since my employer paid the exam fees, they were interested in the big price difference between the exams. They contacted the state board to see if it was possible to choose to take the cheaper exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth). The board said that based on my experience, I had to take the 2-day exam. I know there where people who took the Civil w/ Structural Depth exam at my test site. So, I am guessing that their experience was not all structural (maybe 2 years of general Civil + 2 years of structural). The state board may have given those that didn't have all structural experience a choice on which exam to take. As for me, there was no choice. From what I am hearing, other states give the applicant the choice. The applicant makes the decision based on what is required for where they want to practice. Am I understanding correctly? If this was the case for GA, the number taking the 2-day would have been much lower - maybe zero.I've never heard of a state helping you decide which test to take.I took both vertical and lateral (buildings) in GA. There were 20 of us on day 2, but I suspect there were more that just took the vertical portion.
In GA, the state board selected which exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth or Structural PE) you could take based on the experience you submitted... Are other states similar? Or do some let you decide? That seems like it would make a big difference on the number of Structural PE exam takers in each state.
Still sounds weird, especially in a state that doesn't have a statutory difference between SE and PE. A few of us took the test here in TX which also doesn't require a special SE test but some of us either want the option to work in other states or felt it was the right thing to do. I either case you're better off passing the 2 day SE. Get your MLSE designation from NCEES. It'll look great on your resume.Strange. Although an SE designation is not required to practice structural engineering in my state, there wasn't an option for me on which exam to take. Since my employer paid the exam fees, they were interested in the big price difference between the exams. They contacted the state board to see if it was possible to choose to take the cheaper exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth). The board said that based on my experience, I had to take the 2-day exam. I know there where people who took the Civil w/ Structural Depth exam at my test site. So, I am guessing that their experience was not all structural (maybe 2 years of general Civil + 2 years of structural). The state board may have given those that didn't have all structural experience a choice on which exam to take. As for me, there was no choice. From what I am hearing, other states give the applicant the choice. The applicant makes the decision based on what is required for where they want to practice. Am I understanding correctly? If this was the case for GA, the number taking the 2-day would have been much lower - maybe zero.I've never heard of a state helping you decide which test to take.I took both vertical and lateral (buildings) in GA. There were 20 of us on day 2, but I suspect there were more that just took the vertical portion.
In GA, the state board selected which exam (Civil w/ Structural Depth or Structural PE) you could take based on the experience you submitted... Are other states similar? Or do some let you decide? That seems like it would make a big difference on the number of Structural PE exam takers in each state.
Way too easy? I'm screwed.Ok,, June 18th now............waiting Here, tic tiac, tic tac,
Odd thing, NCEES called only WA SEIII and Cali seismic PEs engineers for this weekend tests. I think the SE April tets was way too easy and they NCEES is trying to raise the pasing cut line by calling the SEIII and the Cali seismic PE to get on board and help to chop lots of head off.
From what I read, they were also asking for volunteers from people who had passed the SE II exam as well, so it wasn't just the WA and CA SE III. See here.Ok,, June 18th now............waiting Here, tic tiac, tic tac,
Odd thing, NCEES called only WA SEIII and Cali seismic PEs engineers for this weekend tests. I think the SE April tets was way too easy and they NCEES is trying to raise the pasing cut line by calling the SEIII and the Cali seismic PE to get on board and help to chop lots of head off.
If you read how they score the exams on the ncees website (ncees scoring), this is normal procedure. New test, so they have to bring in people to help set the passing score. After that, they use some statistical process to set it. No reason to read conspiracy into it.Way too easy? I'm screwed.Ok,, June 18th now............waiting Here, tic tiac, tic tac,
Odd thing, NCEES called only WA SEIII and Cali seismic PEs engineers for this weekend tests. I think the SE April tets was way too easy and they NCEES is trying to raise the pasing cut line by calling the SEIII and the Cali seismic PE to get on board and help to chop lots of head off.
Also noticed their choice of volunteers. Must have had something go bust on the Lat test. I was kinda hoping they were going the other direction though; lower the bar. The people taking the test this weekend are taking it cold. Most of us who felt it was too 'easy' studied for months. I can't imagine they'd do any better than we did. Right?
But what makes my mind spind the most is the fact that how come the NCEES didnt do the study earlier, maybe they are doing a second study to raise the passing score and chop off lots of candidates?If you read how they score the exams on the ncees website (ncees scoring), this is normal procedure. New test, so they have to bring in people to help set the passing score. After that, they use some statistical process to set it. No reason to read conspiracy into it.Way too easy? I'm screwed.Ok,, June 18th now............waiting Here, tic tiac, tic tac,
Odd thing, NCEES called only WA SEIII and Cali seismic PEs engineers for this weekend tests. I think the SE April tets was way too easy and they NCEES is trying to raise the pasing cut line by calling the SEIII and the Cali seismic PE to get on board and help to chop lots of head off.
Also noticed their choice of volunteers. Must have had something go bust on the Lat test. I was kinda hoping they were going the other direction though; lower the bar. The people taking the test this weekend are taking it cold. Most of us who felt it was too 'easy' studied for months. I can't imagine they'd do any better than we did. Right?
That's exactly what's blowing my mind. Surely they had people take the test before it was administered. Right? Besides, isn't the new test basically just a combination of the SE I and SE II that they have been administering for years?But what makes my mind spind the most is the fact that how come the NCEES didnt do the study earlier, maybe they are doing a second study to raise the passing score and chop off lots of candidates?If you read how they score the exams on the ncees website (ncees scoring), this is normal procedure. New test, so they have to bring in people to help set the passing score. After that, they use some statistical process to set it. No reason to read conspiracy into it.Way too easy? I'm screwed.Ok,, June 18th now............waiting Here, tic tiac, tic tac,
Odd thing, NCEES called only WA SEIII and Cali seismic PEs engineers for this weekend tests. I think the SE April tets was way too easy and they NCEES is trying to raise the pasing cut line by calling the SEIII and the Cali seismic PE to get on board and help to chop lots of head off.
Also noticed their choice of volunteers. Must have had something go bust on the Lat test. I was kinda hoping they were going the other direction though; lower the bar. The people taking the test this weekend are taking it cold. Most of us who felt it was too 'easy' studied for months. I can't imagine they'd do any better than we did. Right?
That is exactly why I am of the opinion that there is no way they are going to change the passing rates so that more people pass. More than likely, they are looking to find a way to cut down the pass rate to be around the 30% mark for both exams. (Say 40% for the gravity portion... similar to the SE1 and 30% for the lateral... similar to the SE3).^^ Not so.
It is a replacement for the SE 1 and SE 2 exams.
CA/WA has said many times over the years that the SE1 is not good enough for them so they made their own exams.
This new SE exam is supposed to be on the level of the SE2 and SE3.
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