Unlimited Electrical and Low Voltage Exam Prep Classes Forming
Friday, 19 December 2014
American Contractor Exam Services (www.examprep.org) is forming Orlando classes to help Florida ECLB Unlimited and Limited Energy (low voltage) applicants pass their technical and business exams. ACES offers a 2-day weekend class which covers the books, exam-taking strategies, and math that applicants will encounter on the State Certified Exams. Classes begin January 10 & 11
- Published in Prep Classes
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“I have a signer”
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
It’s been 2 years since the applications have changed with the Florida DBPR for construction licensees. I still get folks that call and say, “I have a signer…” Whoa…Hold on a second. Let’s talk about how you gained your experience. There are no signers, but that doesn’t mean that a person can just put whatever
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License Exam Services’ New Look
Thursday, 14 August 2014
We would like to take this opportunity to thank Jeff Jones of Blue Sky Research on our new website for License Exam Services! Jeff has created a fantastic, interactive, and dynamic website for us; customers can now order their credit reports online with our secure server, and speed up the processing time to get their
- Published in Uncategorized
Exam Preparation Classes
Friday, 20 June 2014
What does a potential contractor look for in an exam preparation class? There are many good exam prep schools out there - choosing the right one for you may be difficult with all the choice out there and the fantastic "99% Passing Rates"! Actually, passing the exam is up to you. Florida's State Contractor exams are very much book exams - you take loads of books with you into the examination room and look up the key words of the questions in the appropriate reference book.
I have been involved with Exam Preparation classes since 2003; I have literally help thousands of contractors with their exams. Over the years, the key things that make for a successful passing score is dedication, critical thinking, organization, and good old field experience. The purpose of an exam preparation class is to help you understand composition of the exam, understand what each book covers, prepare your books to take into the examination, and practice using the books to look up answers. The plumbing exam is a great example: if a person is a service plumber with only existing residential experience and no exposure to medical gas and does not know isometric drawings, that test taker has a huge learning curve because there are isometric drawings he or she will have to do for the exam as well as a plethora of medical gas questions. For the AC contractor who has no exposure to commercial hood systems, that will be his or her big challenge on the A/C test. Those students have some homework to do to get familiar with those concepts-something that a person cannot pick up overnight in a 2-day class.
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Fee Holiday for License Renewals!
Friday, 20 June 2014
The Construction Industry Licensing Board and the Department of Business and Professional Regulation have approved a $100.00 FEE HOLIDAY for the 2014 and 2015 renewal cycles for certified and registered contractors who are renewing their licenses. During the fee holiday, certified and registered contractors renewing an active license will have their fees reduced by $100.00. Certified and registered contractors renewing their inactive licenses will have their $50.00 inactive renewal fee waived in its entirety. All contractors (active or inactive) will still be required to pay the $5.00 unlicensed activity fee and the $4.00 Florida Building Commission fee in order to renew their license.
Expediting Services
Friday, 20 June 2014
As I've been on the phone with Florida Construction License applicants after the April examinations, the word "expediting" seems to get thrown around a lot recently. Several folks who have called seem to think that application processors have a magical "in" up at the DBPR. If they are being told that or if they interpret their conversation as that, I do not know. However, the answer is - No, the DBPR is a government agency that cannot extend preferential treatment to some and not to others.
Many years ago back in my Civil days as a CAD/GIS consultant, we sent promotional t-shirts to a government entity and the hammer came down fast on us and the government employees who accepted those hokey t-shirts (which were good scrap shirts for painting...) Because the shirts were freebies, our company couldn't imagine that we doing anything wrong, but we were told we were bad. After that, we were careful to check before we acted so that we didn't not interfere with anyone's career.
- Published in All, Application Processing