Antigravitation
Structural
- Apr 5, 2016
- 2
I can't help but sharing with you my horrible yet interesting experience in my Surveying Exam in April 2016.
It was my first try of the CA PE exams and I took it seriously. 3 months of hard study, bought tons of testing materials, traveled 6000 miles from Europe and squeezed 3 exams in a row in my 3 holidays. Simply could not afford any failure!
Finally came the test day, it was a nice morning and I arrived the test center very early. Everything looked alright and I started my surveying test confidently. Not until the second question which contains angle calculation that I realized myself made an extremely horrible mistake: I left my CALCULATOR in the car!
Immediately I was deeply shocked and just couldn't believe it was happening. There was no way I could make up under that circumstance, I couldn't walk out of the room except for restroom, and there was a camera watching me every second. No time to waste, I just had to carry on with my brain and bare hands. Heart racing and sweating, I felt so sorry that all my hard work suddenly became useless, I failed my parents, my girlfriend and all the colleagues that supported me. I even started to think about my next attempt in October. Thousands of thoughts overwhelmed me, yet I could not stop my pencil.
I did all the +-*/^ as fast as I could without decimal precision, and even some sqrt,sin,cos with reasonable estimation. Lots of trigonometric calculations(with xx0xx'xx"angles), complicated traverse and curve questions or for those with options all very close to each other, I just had to give up. Eventually I completely guessed 12 out of 55, very roughly estimated 10/55, and for the rest 33 I just did half estimation half calculation only once for each. 4 sheets of scratch paper was just not enough for the hand calc load! Real torment and nightmare!
Thank God and such a MIRACLE and big relief when I learned just two days ago that I passed all 3 exams! I can finally bear recalling that experience. Although they may set the bar lower this time, or I just used up all my luck, that's something can keep me high for long time.
My afterthoughts about that:
- I had hardly any surveying experience, therefore the only thing I did was understanding books and practicing problems. Trying to understand theories from books(I used Mansour's and Cuomo's books) is the key to every question. There're lots of conceptual questions in the exam and make sure you can solve most of them.
- Then, just practice more and more. It really helped that I practiced over 500 surveying questions. Maybe that's more than I needed but it sharpened my mind and understand the questions very quickly. After loads of practice, you'll find the test is just old questions with new numbers.
- Finally, summarize and categorize the critical questions and try to understand the theories again. If you find it really difficult, just try to memorize the solution approach of those questions.
I think those are the non-lucky part that saved my life, and all the crazy hand calcs didn't fail me! This PE has very high value!
It was my first try of the CA PE exams and I took it seriously. 3 months of hard study, bought tons of testing materials, traveled 6000 miles from Europe and squeezed 3 exams in a row in my 3 holidays. Simply could not afford any failure!
Finally came the test day, it was a nice morning and I arrived the test center very early. Everything looked alright and I started my surveying test confidently. Not until the second question which contains angle calculation that I realized myself made an extremely horrible mistake: I left my CALCULATOR in the car!
Immediately I was deeply shocked and just couldn't believe it was happening. There was no way I could make up under that circumstance, I couldn't walk out of the room except for restroom, and there was a camera watching me every second. No time to waste, I just had to carry on with my brain and bare hands. Heart racing and sweating, I felt so sorry that all my hard work suddenly became useless, I failed my parents, my girlfriend and all the colleagues that supported me. I even started to think about my next attempt in October. Thousands of thoughts overwhelmed me, yet I could not stop my pencil.
I did all the +-*/^ as fast as I could without decimal precision, and even some sqrt,sin,cos with reasonable estimation. Lots of trigonometric calculations(with xx0xx'xx"angles), complicated traverse and curve questions or for those with options all very close to each other, I just had to give up. Eventually I completely guessed 12 out of 55, very roughly estimated 10/55, and for the rest 33 I just did half estimation half calculation only once for each. 4 sheets of scratch paper was just not enough for the hand calc load! Real torment and nightmare!
Thank God and such a MIRACLE and big relief when I learned just two days ago that I passed all 3 exams! I can finally bear recalling that experience. Although they may set the bar lower this time, or I just used up all my luck, that's something can keep me high for long time.
My afterthoughts about that:
- I had hardly any surveying experience, therefore the only thing I did was understanding books and practicing problems. Trying to understand theories from books(I used Mansour's and Cuomo's books) is the key to every question. There're lots of conceptual questions in the exam and make sure you can solve most of them.
- Then, just practice more and more. It really helped that I practiced over 500 surveying questions. Maybe that's more than I needed but it sharpened my mind and understand the questions very quickly. After loads of practice, you'll find the test is just old questions with new numbers.
- Finally, summarize and categorize the critical questions and try to understand the theories again. If you find it really difficult, just try to memorize the solution approach of those questions.
I think those are the non-lucky part that saved my life, and all the crazy hand calcs didn't fail me! This PE has very high value!