First and foremost, be aware the SE is transitioning to a computer based testing after the October 2023 cycle so the opinions you collect will be from people who studied for and took a different format of the exam. I feel for people testing in 2024/2025; they're literal guinea pigs for an already very difficult undertaking.
I personally spent 601 hours studying for the SE over 2 exam cycles. I took the PPI combined vertical and lateral course and the AEI lateral course. Bridge depth for both. Regardless of the course you take most of the heavy lifting happens outside of class and you need to be working problems, and reading codes in addition to any review class coursework.
- PPI Combined Vertical and Lateral:
[ul][li] This is a true review/refresher course. The instructors are not doing any in depth teaching of the material perse but rather providing a high level overview of possible exam topics. If you are very new to a subject the classes are hard to follow due to the pace. The pace of these lectures were very fast and often it felt like the instructors were simply reading off the slides and not providing much commentary or additional discussion to slides due to time limitations, you could tell the teachers wanted to give you as much info as possible and meant well but it often felt like an onslaught of information was being thrown at you.
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[ul][li] PPI makes some of the best published books for example problems and studying. The Structural Engineering Reference manual, 6 Minute problems for the SE, David Micenheimer bridge book, and the Structural engineering Solved problems are all solid resources. The last book in this list is similar to the PPI PE civil practice problems book, everyone seems to agree the questions are harder than on exam day but force you to really understand the topics covered by the exam. I recommed all SE examinees read the SERM as a baseline knowledge for the study effort.
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[ul][li] Overall this course was OK but i was happy with the money I spent for it. It was really good for the vertical portion as I had a good background in these topics. The lateral moved too fast for me as I was unfamiliar with ASCE 7 seismic provisions at the time and didn't have a strong enough background to keep up. The assigned homework was hard but I definitely felt I learned a lot and was prepared for the vertical AM on exam day. The homework problems were all from the books above; many problems took an hour or hours to solve and were formatted more like depth problems than 6 minute exam day questions.
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[ul][li] This course lacked bridge depth material. The vast majority of my studying for the bridge depth portion was done on my own and from FHWA design examples.
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[ul][li] The course included a forum for asking questions and discussing problems. The teachers were extremely helpful here and the back and forth between students was beneficial to my learning.
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AEI Lateral:
[ul][li] The pace was frustratingly slow at times! On the contrary this meant when we got to topics I had never seen they were covered in depth and from the absolute beginning. Much of the material was presented as if you had never seen the topic before which was beneficial for engineers without exposure to certain exam topics or design codes.
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[ul][li] The homework problems were significantly shorter than PPI but had a higher volume to solve. The homework problems were primarily formatted in 6 minute style short form problems. The course included "Mini-exams" at the end of each chapter/material/topic. I found these very useful for taking timed practice tests and exposing my exam day weaknesses.
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[ul][li] The instructor for the Concrete, Steel, and Bridges, Dr. Z, is the worst instructor & lecturer I have encountered in all of my years in a classroom including BS,MS, and professional conferences/courses/trainings. His slides were littered with errors, he only narrated slides and did not provide commentary on them, and was extremely condescending towards students with questions. He would aggressively respond or even disregard questions he didn't feel like answering; this man clearly felt joy but putting students down. I eventually stopped attending the webinars as my time was better utilized with self study rather than sitting through class only to have to re-read and solve all the class problems on my own anyway.
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[ul][li] The bridge depth literature included with the course was very good. Despite the errors and being taught by Dr. Z the 15 bridge depth example problems covered an array of topics that really had me prepared for exam day PM session.
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[ul][li] The forums were not very helpful here. The instructors were condescending in their responses and students did not have a discussion dialog like with PPI. The forums were literally just a data dump of threads by date instead of being organized by topic so it was difficult to see if others had similar questions as you.
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