Passed PDD, 2nd attempts
1. Study Resources
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Elif’s Questions: I started my journey here. These are perfect for beginners and ease you into the PDD mindset. The questions align closely with Mehta’s Building Construction. If you are like me and struggle to read textbooks cover-to-cover, I recommend using Elif’s questions to guide your reading—look up the relevant chapters based on the questions you solve.
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The "Mehta Book" (Building Construction: Principles, Materials, & Systems): This is hands-down my favorite resource. I found it much more readable and engaging than Fundamentals of Building Construction (Allen/Iano). The illustrations are superior and help you visualize complex concepts intuitively.
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Amber Book: The content is top-tier, especially the video lectures, flashcards, and practice problems.
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Tip for MEP: The mechanical videos can be overwhelming at first. Don't get stuck trying to understand the deep theory immediately. I recommend reading ** The Architect’s Studio Companion ** first. It explains mechanical systems with great diagrams and helps you grasp the basics quickly. Once you have that foundation, the Amber Book videos will make much more sense.
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Practice Exams: In my opinion, Amber Book’s practice questions are the closest to the actual exam format.
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NCARB Practice Exams: Aside from the official NCARB practice exam, real questions are scarce. I recommend doing the ARE 4.0 practice problems for extra volume. You can probably skip the 3.0 materials as they feel a bit too dated now.
2. Exam Strategy
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Focus on the "Low-Hanging Fruit": The scope of this exam is massive. I found it difficult to guarantee points on complex Structural or Construction detail questions. My strategy was to lock in points on the more straightforward topics, such as Project Management domains. Master the Delivery Methods, A201, and the Architect’s responsibilities during DD, CD, Bidding, and CA. These are easier to control than obscure construction details.
3. Study Tips & Mindset
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Review Correct Answers Too: We all know we should review wrong answers, but reviewing the questions you got right is just as important. sometimes we guess correctly without truly understanding the principle. Don't let luck give you a false sense of security.
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Organize Your Notes: Since the content volume is huge, scattered notes will hurt you. Organize your notes by major categories first, then refine the details as you go.
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Just Take the Exam: Don't let fear hold you back. Showing up is already a success. Because the scope is so broad, you will likely see questions you never prepared for—and that's okay. Even if you don't feel 100% ready, taking the exam gives you invaluable direction for future study.
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Leverage AI as a Study Partner I’m not trying to advertise for any AI tools, but engaging in a dialogue with AI was a game-changer for me. The back-and-forth process really helps clarify complex concepts. Even for questions you answered correctly, use AI to check your reasoning. For incorrect answers, it’s invaluable when you don’t have a mentor available to ask immediately. It helps you understand the "why" behind the solution. More importantly, It’s a beast at organizing messy topics. I used it to group related concepts and summarize key points instantly. It saved me hours of manual note-taking so I could actually spend that time studying. Finally, remember, AI is not 100% accurate. Use it to understand the reasoning, but always cross-reference its explanations with the official correct answer or primary resources.
Good luck to everyone studying!
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Hi,
This is all so helpful! I take PDD soon and am very nervous. I've done quite well on the amberbook practice exam so that makes me feel better to hear it feels similar to the NCARB exams. Is there anything you wish you had studied for more or information you found was the most helpful? Congrats again!
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I got lots of structural, retaining walls and wall detailing questions during my first attempt, but those items are unpredictable so it's hard to prepare, so the second time, I tried to focus on those items that will definitely be contained in the exam, like specs, project manual, and architect 's responsible during DD, CD, bidding, CA etc. If you learned those items well enough, I'm sure you'll have a good chance.
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