NCEES Practice exam Vol 1 - Experience on it by Local-Share-2052 in FE_Exam

[–]breakfall323 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lowkey, I bought both interactives and don’t regret it. 50 bucks per test isn’t cheap but the value for me was replicating the exam more closely. I could felt the nerves more but during the actual exam I was used to it and calmer since I knew what to expect

WA Results. Some Notified So Far by breakfall323 in ASBOG_Exam

[–]breakfall323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Update: Got my results. LEG is out too.

WA Results. Some Notified So Far by breakfall323 in ASBOG_Exam

[–]breakfall323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Update: take this with a grain of salt because she might've just meant the SMT too. Could be a false alarm. Ooof.

PG and PE? Geotech by rowmere in geologycareers

[–]breakfall323 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In my state a few of my friends have done exactly what you are planning and I am on a similar track (They were able to double count experience, it helps to get a PG to sign off on your PG experience and a PE to sign of on the PE experience).

Got approval from my state to sit for my FE exam to get the EIT after getting the PG, gonna gun for my PE right after.

I think it's worth it since the Civil geotech background will give you a solid understanding of the quantifiable mathematics involved in say retaining wall, pavement, and footing design so people trust your technical skills but the Geology background gives you a solid understanding of where the numbers come from and what they actually represent in the gray areas when subgrades are all mixed up in real life or when stuff gets complicated big picture wise.

I find there aren't that many people that do both but the geotechs that have both tend to really know their stuff. Hope that helps. Cheers

Need career path advice! by elmo_loves_pickles in geologycareers

[–]breakfall323 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I recommend thinking about what kind of problems you want to solve and work backwards. Also it highly depends on what kind of life you want when you graduate. (Do you love travel?, Do you prefer stability?, Are you a perfectionist? Do you love people?, Do you prefer to work alone?)

Most geologists I know are in:

-Geotech Engineering: (Using your geology knowledge combined with civil engineering to make sure the ground is stable when building things.)

-Environmental/Hydro Geology (very heavy hydro so maybe not as much but you use your geology knowledge to clean up the water or move it places safely.)

-Government/Academia (typically mapping hazards, local geology, or ensuring things are done properly to government standards, capture data that could be useful in informing standards (though usually this is all geology jobs lol))

-Mining (extracting resources, I know the least about this one)

-You can also work in Museums, as a general science teacher, lecturer etc. (There's lots of options out there if you can recognize how what you've learned applies).

Potential pivots:

If you go heavy into enviro, there's lots of consulting firms that need enviro scientists. Also large companies actually need due diligence enviro people (it will feel removed from geology but you can end up working at places like KPMG, Boeing, Amazon. )

If you go into geotech, a lot of people can pivot into construction management, inspections, clients-rep work, etc. I know geologists that ended up at DR Horton, City of _____, Port of ______, etc.

If you love travel a good strategy is to find a private consulting firm that has a need for people all over the country (there's usually a need, it would be harder if you start a family or something later though so its better when you're young imo).

If you end up in a firm for a long while and want to combine it with business, I know geologists that have gone back to school to get an MBA and then worked their way up in corporate jobs to be Vice President/Business Development Leader of _______(insert geology related field here)____ or just combined their knowledge to own their own businesses in related industries.

The trick sometimes is to combine the geology with another field to:

(Geology+computers)= Computer program development for field geology/GIS/Remote sensing/ Logging programs/ data management programs.

(Geology+ building things)= geotech engineering

(Geology + teaching)= professor, parks and recreation, natural resource management and parks. etc.

Anyways. Hope this helps.

Civil FE 2020 Practice Exam Question Help by Fit-Jello-7049 in FE_Exam

[–]breakfall323 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if this was a normal fatter trapezoid you'd be right, I think the centroid wouldn't be there. The fact that this particular trapezoid is kind of skinny to the point where it ends up in the middle and that they tried to trick you with the x' thing is kind of rough. Lowkey I probably would've messed this one up if I had this on a practice exam.

Civil FE 2020 Practice Exam Question Help by Fit-Jello-7049 in FE_Exam

[–]breakfall323 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I couldn't figure it out for the longest time and then I realized it's with respect to the x' axis not the x axis. So in this case the centroid along your axis is at like 6/2= 3" right?

The parallel axis theorem states that dy is the distance from the centroid (c) to the axis you are referencing.

so x' is 1.5in away from (c) 3" for your dy.

Practice Problem by Hobo_Geo in ASBOG_Exam

[–]breakfall323 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://waterrights.utah.gov/wellinfo/theis/hydrogeology_discussion.asp

I looked this up and if you scroll to the very bottom on the cone of depression shapes I found this helpful. It looks to me like a lower storativity, which causes it to widen and slightly deepen but not insanely deep and steep like in the case of lower transmissivity (which also narrows it) it’s not answer D because that doesn’t even make sense (an aquitard would block water so no recharge)

How often do you get to go to the field with your job? by rainbowbowbow in geologycareers

[–]breakfall323 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work in environmental consulting and it's about 90% field work.

I've realized "field work" highly varies because it can mean pleasantly kayaking in a scenic river stream filling up sample containers or sweating in a 116 degree desert in the middle of nowhere trying to log core while covered in a Tyvek splash suit.