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    DebMacP

    Hi UssBea - I felt similarly about PPD being a lot harder than the other exams and made myself a game that helped pull everything together by designing a series of pretend buildings and running through the building code over and over again, see this post https://are5community.ncarb.org/hc/en-us/community/posts/34153376159511-PPD-Planning-Worksheet Good luck!

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    UssBea (Edited )

    Thank you so much. AmberBook has a decision tree kind of like that.

    I'm just now starting to play around with your material to see how it works for me, but reflecting on the exams, I think what really tackle me up was exactly what my AI algorithm (ChatGPT) labels as “trivia”—concepts that go into such obscure detail that no study system can fully cover them and really are totally irrelevant to real design work. NCARB mixes them happily with the core content.

    I’ll have to figure out how to tackle that. At this point, I basically just have to learn trivia. Thanks again.

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    Rajan K.

    UssBea, focus on active recall learning. After failing 5 exams in 16 days, I found a very effective way to study for AREs. After 2 months I passed 4 exams in a week (passing 2 exams in a day). I have documented everything in the Arniko Academy Blog. Feel free to DM me at rajan@arniko.academy if you have any specific questions. All the best!

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    kkgalicinao

    UssBea I know we've chatted through community forums in the past, and I'm sorry to hear about your struggles with PPD. As you know, you are SO close to passing, so I can understanding how frustrated you must feel at this point. 

    Because you are missing by just a few questions each time, I'd recommend that you focus on passive studying techniques just like Rajan K. has suggested. Don't do an overhaul of restudying, and don't rely on ChatGPT to boost your performance. Active recall, paired with practice application, takes the knowledge that you've learned to the next step. Use flashcards (both generated and hand-written) can help solidify your understanding of key terms. Reformatting your notes into visual diagrams or charts will allow you to put the content in a different perspective. Applying your knowledge to real-life projects or tasks at work gives you the opportunity to see the content in context - similar to how you might on the ARE.

    Reflect on your PPD exam attempts. Which questions did you struggle on? Were there any topics you were unfamiliar with? Did you second-guess yourself and/or change answers at the last minute? Your answers to these questions can help guide where you focus your studies as you prepare for your retake. Remember, you just need a few more correct answers to get that pass.

    Don't give up! You've made it this far and you owe it to yourself to cross the finish line. You got this!!!

    Kiara | Black Spectacles | Community

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    UssBea

    Ms. Galicinao,

    Thank you very much for your suggestion—you really nailed exactly what I’m struggling with.

    At this point, continuing to grind through more content feels like going over the same ground again and again. Besides being mentally and emotionally exhausted from studying the same material repeatedly, I’ve even caught myself more than once explaining the content to candidates younger than me.

    I don’t feel lost at all when it comes to the core knowledge of the exam. Where I truly struggle now is with the exam itself: the murky wording, the twisted framing of the content, the overly convoluted questions, and those improbable scenarios with answer choices that are so close to each other that it’s hard to clearly rule out the wrong ones.

    I honestly think it would be extremely helpful —for me and for other candidates as well— if your courses addressed how to take the exam, not just the content. At this stage, I’m starting to see this almost as a reading-comprehension and exam-grammar test rather than a pure technical test on architecture and construction. Treating that skill as just as important as any technical subject would align much more closely with what NCARB seems to be testing.

    Thank you again for your insight—I really appreciate it.

    Best regards,
    Ulises

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    Professor Hanlon

    Ulises:

    I am an ARE mentor. I hold study sessions each Tuesday 4:30p-5:30p PST west coast time zone on Zoom. Let me know if you want to join.
     
    Professor Umber Hanlon
    Master Architect Distinction
    Gradiom
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    Henry T

    Hi there,

    I don't know if you have taken PDD as well in your journey, but what helped me pass PPD was continuing the learning process rather than thumbing through the same materials.

    After I failed PPD, I proceed to study for PDD, which I also ended up failing it when I took it for the first time. However, by furthering my knowledge as a preparation for PDD, I was able to go back into PPD exam with a lot more clarity . . Finally passing PPD.

    Fall forward is my memo for this journey. Hope that helps!

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    kkgalicinao

    UssBea Thank you for your feedback and perspectives. It makes a lot of sense and I totally agree with you. I view the ARE as a three-part challenge: learn the content, apply it to the exam format, and eliminate external stressors. The first part (learning the content) is simpler, but it's the other two that can be tricky! 

    Have you checked out any of our ARE Live episodes? We host them live monthly, but we also keep a full library of past episodes available so that you can listen back and watch later. We present mock exams for each division, focusing on strategy and tips for approaching questions, how to make educated guesses, etc. It takes those answer explanations (that you've seen in the practice exams) to the next level, as a licensed architect talks through all the considerations of the question and answer choice, and even addresses follow-up questions live from listeners. We also have done several episodes about study strategies and test-taking tips in general. I highly recommend you check them out! Here are a few that I'd recommend to you:

    We're hosting an updated episode next month that combines the second and third links above, focused on How to Pass the ARE 5.0 in 2026. You can register for the live episode here and tune in on Wednesday, February 18th at 12PM CT.

    Don't hesitate to reach out if we can support you in any other ways as you wrap up your ARE journey :) 

    Kiara | Black Spectacles | Community

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