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Michael Coslo wrote:
Cmd Buzz Corey wrote: John Smith wrote: ... the "anateur exams" are certainly no hinderence, they always have been as simple as pie--a college grad trained in the art of "test taking" could study for a day and pass the most challenging I think you need to go back and look at the early exams. There was a time when an applicant was required to actually draw a schematic of various circuits and explaine how they worked. Is that supposed to be hard? Depends on the person. For someone who knows a little radio theory and the regulations of the amateur radio service, none of the tests were very hard. Heck, I passed the old General and Advanced class tests in 1968 - at the age of 14. That was the summer between 8th and 9th grade for me. No big deal, there were younger hams than me with Extras back then. The difference between then and now is the test *method* more than the content. And even after the exams became multiple choice type, (about 1960 for the General) one had to know the material to get the correct answer as the answers to the acutal questions were not available. Yeah. You'll find that question pool bugaboo in a lot of fields these days, including fields where if a person makes a mistake because of not knowing the material, lives may be lost. Good or bad, I don't think FCC will go back to the old way. There were study guides with sample questions, but no questions pools with the exact answer available for memorization. Now if you want *really* hard, make it no study guide, no question pool, and the applicant has to do all the learning research with NO idea of what is on the test! 8^) The old study guides were essay-type Q&A that outlined the general area of knowledge. One question could cover a *lot* of ground. The old Extra study guide was as much as 279 questions at one point. If you did not know the theory, then you probably weren't going to pass. Again john smith knows not of what he speaks. I took the tests from the question pools. For me, they were all pretty easy. They were not easy because of the question pools. They were easy because they were fairly basic material. But you had seen the exact Q&A before, right? What I have seen of the earlier test is that they too were pretty basic. Any difference is not so great that those who came before need not feel any superiority. Not a question of superiority, but of test validity. The difference between then and now is the test *method* more than the content. I aced the Technician test with the only study being the safety questions. I did study a bit for the General. For the Extra, I spent a week taking the on-line tests. Questions that I knew the answer to, I got right of course. Those that I got wrong earned me a trip to the books or online to find out why I got it wrong. By the time I was finished, I aced the test just about every time on line, and then in the actual test. And I knew the material. Elapsed time, one week. For you. But I bet you had more than a little electrical/radio knowledge before you ever looked at a ham radio study guide. Now the Morse code was another thing entirely. That was hard. But then I'm just a dum nickel extra! ;^) I bet it says the same thing on your license as it does on mine. With no mention of dumb or nickles, Mike. Each of us met the requirements in force at the time of being licensed. That the requirements changed over time isn't usually due to the people taking the new tests. Looking down on somebody today because they didn't take the same tests you took years ago is kind of like getting mad at someone who paid less for a VCR last week than you paid 20 years ago.... 73 de Jim, N2EY |