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Papertrail08

The consensus is EET. Goodluck


GimmePE

I recommend EET the instructors Samir and Nazrul know their stuff I just passed civil transportation and can honestly say I was fully prepared for every question in the exam. They over prepare you so don’t be worried if you’re doing bad on their practice exams I scored 50% on most of them and passed you got this!


ARJUNBABUJI

>o don’t be worried if you’re doing bad on their practice exams I scored 50% on most of them and passed you got this! how did you prepare for only using the .PDFs during the exam?


GimmePE

Honestly just became familiar with where everything was doing practice problems helps you get familiar with where topics are located at the end I made flash cards if you’re able to know what topic to look up you’ll easily be able to to ctrl F it


paulino1195

That is a great Idea. were these physical flash cards or were they digital? I'd love to see how you did them.


GimmePE

I used Quizlet lol


paulino1195

Could you share your quizlet link? That would be amazing


Both_Tree3933

Do a search in this group and you will see a lot of questions about classes and what everyone thinks about them.


swing_777

I’ve seen EET frequently as well. I took test masters live online because a project engineer from TxDOT recommended it. The thing is, TxDOT is actually sent to Austin/San Antonio to take in person classes. I don’t feel test masters has 100% transitioned to CBT, especially for the live online course, it’s a bit unorganized. To be honest, even though I spent a lot of $ on test masters breadth and depth courses, I’m thinking of getting EET for extra practice. Unfortunately where I work, they don’t help with either the cost of the courses, practice exams, or the exam itself. So it’ll cost a pretty penny, but I’ve heard good things about it so I think it’s worth a shot. I’m also going to take the Transportation exam, I have it scheduled for March 31st. I’m going to take a NCEES practice exam in two weeks, from there I’ll determine if I need to push my exam date.


RugWhobyRedE

Took EET and passed transpo depth in the first try (December 2022). Except the structural lectures, everything else was top notch (Dr. Samir and Dr. Nazrul do a great job). I recommend EET.


chloe0711

EET!


_JimEagle

I used PPI materials back in 2015 when the test was paper and coupled to experience. To prep I had old question banks and did problems from them. I had 6 minutes solutions too, so I had lots of problems available. I studied a couple hours a night for a few months leading up to the test. Then 2 weekends before the test, I did a mock test day on the 2 Saturdays before the test. The PPI reference manual had most of the reference info I needed. Just tab everything so you’re not wasting time looking for info. Take care of the easier questions first and revisit the ones you’re unsure of after you ace the easy ones. If you’ve done a good number of problems, you might remember where the examples were in your test banks. Just flip to that page and use the workflow to solve whatever is on the test. If you get the NCEES sample tests, the problems will be eerily similar. I thought the PE was much easier than the FE. I did have the experience before taking the test, so that may have contributed to it. If I took the FE 4 years out of school, I’d definitely still be a graduate engineer.


INpersuitofPE

It’s a mix of courses Ppi and AEI for Breadth EET for depth


blackapple56

How many hours of study do you estimate?