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![]() "Dee D. Flint" wrote: I have known several people who already had the technical background (or most of it) and passed the exam and knew very little about the rules. Take the (snip) While that might be an exception, would a person with a technical background be the type to ignore rules? Instead, I suspect a person who would make the effort to gain a technical background would also likely make the effort to learn the rules of any activity he or she might be involved in. (snip) Plus the questions don't begin to cover all the rules that directly apply to the operations of a Technician class licensee. Well, if you're looking for a test to cover all the rules, it seems to me you're looking for a test with several hundred questions. College students don't even have to take a test with several hundred questions to pass a class to prepare for a career. Likewise, an extensive exam like this doesn't fit into the current exam concept (basic exams for entry into each license class). With that in mind, how are you going to sell the FCC on that idea? None of the tests currently comes close to covering the full scope of rules applying to the license class on that particular license exam and that is what needs to be changed. (snip) Why? Do you have some evidence (personal, rhetorical, or otherwise) that would suggest the current tests are linked to a specific problem with rule violations? From what I've seen, most violations are the result of intentional rule infractions, not ignorance of the rules themselves. If the applicant has studied sufficiently to get 75% right on a rules only test of say 100 or so questions, he/she shouldn't have too much problem remembering the rules. My wife only had 50 questions on the exams to pass her international law class recently (two 20 question exams and one 10 question exam). You're asking for much more from people preparing for what is fundamentally a recreational activity. That, in my opinion, is a little ridiculous, Dee. The rules covered in the exam barely scratch the surface. And one can miss most or all the rules questions and still pass the current exam element. (snip) You keep saying that, but do you have anything to suggest it has ever happened (much less commonly so)? Again, it is theoretically possible, but not really very likely. As I said before, a person that poorly prepared would likely miss several other questions on the exam, meaning he or she would almost have to get the majority correct on each part of the exam to pass the overall exam. I regularly have people tell me they'd like to practice their code on the air but "can't because they are only a Tech." They are totally unaware that they can work code in the VHF (snip) Did they tell you that (they were unaware they can work code on VHF), or is that your interpretation of their comment. I've made a similar comment once or twice over the years - not because I was unaware I could work code on VHF, but because there are so few others doing so on those frequencies. Again, take the Tech test. There is very little on digital operations or satellite operations yet these are open to Technicians. (snip) There was such material in the pool I studied (7/97 - 6/01 pool). For satellite, questions T1C01 through T1C11, T1E05 through T1E08, T3C01 through T3C05, T3C10 through T3C12, and a few others here and there throughout the pool. There are a similar number of questions for digital operations. Or another area that could be included in the test, although I'd admit it's not a necessity, is something on the history of amateur radio. (snip) Or how about including a little bit on space weather and it's effects not only on propagation but how major flares can potentially effect electronics in general. (snip) Come on, Dee. If you throw in a little more math and language skills, you could almost offer a college degree to those who pass the exams you want. Here is another example. The tests do not have questions addressing the issue of how far from the band edge one should stay to insure that none of their signal is outside the allowable band. I've heard (snip) Not in so many words, but the concepts are there (bandwidths of various modes and frequency limits). The old Novice used to have a couple of questions about this, but I'm not sure that made it's way over to the new tests. Dwight that argument can be turned against the proposal to eliminate code testing as follows so don't go there. "Finally, I have to wonder if there is any reason to change the exams at all. The current exams have evolved over many years, and I just don't see how the suggested changes I've seen (yours and others to eliminate code testing) offer a real improvement." Not really. My objection isn't based on the fact that the current exams have evolved over the years, but on the fact that I don't see how the suggested changes offer an improvement. The part about the current exams evolving over the years was intended to point out how well they fit the current needs, leaving little room for improvement by the suggestions offered. The same cannot be said about the code test because it hasn't really evolved to fit the current needs (from a regulatory perspective, there is no current need for the code test). Now, before this turns into a code test debate, lets drop this at that. The top three things that any ham should know, in my opinion, are rules/regulations, safety, and good operating practices. These need a great deal more coverage than they currently get. Obviously every Ham should know those things. But, as noted in section 97.3 of the rules (below), this is an activity oriented towards self-study or self-training, not massive tests with extensive knowledge before entrance. Section 97.3 "A radio communications service for the purpose of self-training, intercommunication and technical investigations carried out by amateurs, that is, duly authorized persons interested in radio technique solely with a personal aim and without pecuniary interest." The rules are there for any Ham to study on their own - with plenty of warnings in the exams about what might happen if they don't follow those rules. Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ |
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