DaveVikingPE
Structural
- Aug 9, 2001
- 1,008
In my state of New York, there is no "SE" designation. Everyone is simply a "PE." So if you took the civil PE exam, you're a PE and if you took the elelctrical PE exam, you're a PE.
The time has come for me to look further. With my PE in hand, I can call myself a structural engineer in the state of New York - which is what my job title is, and it's what I do. I took the Civil PE, with the structural portion in the PM.
The time has come... because I see the writing on the wall... for me to get crackin' on the SE exam. Here's what the NCEES web site ( says, snas a bunch of other stuff like classes taken, etc. - all stuff that I meet - about the "Model Law Structural Engineer" - something that would be good for my career:
"Passed 16 hours of structural examinations consisting of one of the following: NCEES structural examinations, 8 hours of which are the Structural II examination, 16-hour state-written structural examinations taken prior to 2004, NCEES SE II plus 8-hour state-written examinations"
For clarification, here's NCEES eligibility for the SE II: "In jurisdictions that license structural engineers SEPARATELY from professional engineers, structural engineering licensure candidates must take one or more of the following exams: PE Civil, PE Structural I, PE Structural II, and/or any required state-specific exam(s). "
I think I would fall into the first category, that is, I would take the SE II. Issues I anticipate encountering: 1) should I take the SE II exam in New York? Why bother since New York doesn't license SE's separately. 2) How about taking the SE II in Illinois? I wonder if they'll make me take the SE I (I don't want to, but would do it provided I could take the SE II the next day - assumes six months of solid study on my part, and that I do design for a living, it will be hard, but certainly passable). 3) What about California? Would I have to take the SE I, II, and III there?
I picked Illinois and California because they're the most well-known states regarding the SE license to me.
Comments? Thoughts? Those of us with the SE, especially newly-minted SE's please chim in! Thanks in advance!
The time has come for me to look further. With my PE in hand, I can call myself a structural engineer in the state of New York - which is what my job title is, and it's what I do. I took the Civil PE, with the structural portion in the PM.
The time has come... because I see the writing on the wall... for me to get crackin' on the SE exam. Here's what the NCEES web site ( says, snas a bunch of other stuff like classes taken, etc. - all stuff that I meet - about the "Model Law Structural Engineer" - something that would be good for my career:
"Passed 16 hours of structural examinations consisting of one of the following: NCEES structural examinations, 8 hours of which are the Structural II examination, 16-hour state-written structural examinations taken prior to 2004, NCEES SE II plus 8-hour state-written examinations"
For clarification, here's NCEES eligibility for the SE II: "In jurisdictions that license structural engineers SEPARATELY from professional engineers, structural engineering licensure candidates must take one or more of the following exams: PE Civil, PE Structural I, PE Structural II, and/or any required state-specific exam(s). "
I think I would fall into the first category, that is, I would take the SE II. Issues I anticipate encountering: 1) should I take the SE II exam in New York? Why bother since New York doesn't license SE's separately. 2) How about taking the SE II in Illinois? I wonder if they'll make me take the SE I (I don't want to, but would do it provided I could take the SE II the next day - assumes six months of solid study on my part, and that I do design for a living, it will be hard, but certainly passable). 3) What about California? Would I have to take the SE I, II, and III there?
I picked Illinois and California because they're the most well-known states regarding the SE license to me.
Comments? Thoughts? Those of us with the SE, especially newly-minted SE's please chim in! Thanks in advance!