Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 5J-17.034 - Grading
(1) The Department shall use any national
examination which is available and approved by the Board.
(2) A national examination is an examination
developed by or for a national or multi-state professional association, board,
council, or society (hereinafter referred to as organization) and administered
for the purpose of assessing entry level skills necessary to protect the
health, safety, and welfare of the public from the incompetent practice of
surveying and mapping and meets the following standards:
(a) The purpose of the examination shall be
to establish entry level standards of practice that shall be common to all
practitioners of surveying and mapping;
(b) The practice of the profession at the
national level must be defined through an occupational survey with a
representative sample of all practitioners and professional practices; and,
(c) The examination for licensure
must assess the scope of practice and the entry skills defined by the national
survey.
(3) The
organization must be generally recognized by practitioners across the nation in
the form of representatives from the State Boards or shall have membership
representing a majority of the nation's or states' practitioners who have been
licensed through the national examination.
(4) The organization shall be the responsible
body for overseeing the development and scoring of the national
examination.
(5) The organization
shall provide security guidelines for the development and grading of the
national examination and shall oversee the enforcement of these
guidelines.
(6) Grading Criteria
and Passing Scores:
(a) The Principles and
Practice Examination and the Fundamentals Examination contain machine graded,
questions developed by the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and
Surveying (NCEES) based upon the results of National Task Analysis Surveys
performed periodically. Grades shall be determined by the applicant's ability
to choose the correct answer from several given choices. The passing score
shall be established by NCEES.
(b)
The Florida Jurisdictional Examination consists of 100 questions developed by
the Department, or the Department's contracted vendor. The questions will be
weighted equally and machine graded. A passing grade on the Florida
Jurisdictional Examination is defined as 70% of the total possible
points.
(c) Scores on each
examination shall be reported in a pass/fail format as follows: the Principles
and Practice Examination, the Fundamentals Examination, the Florida
Jurisdictional Examination shall have separate scores. A passing score must be
achieved on each examination in order to obtain licensure, however the three
passing scores need not be obtained in one sitting.
(7) Examinations shall be graded solely and
exclusively by the Department or the Department's designee, national
examination provider or its designee.
(8) Departmentally developed objective,
examinations shall be graded by the Department or contracted vendor. The
Department or the Department's contracted vendor shall review the item analysis
and any statistically questionable items after the examination has been
administered. Based upon this review, the Department or the Department's
contracted vendor shall adjust the scoring key by totally disregarding the
questionable items for grading purposes or by multi-keying, giving credit for
more than one correct answer per item. All items which do not adequately and
reliably measure the applicant's ability to practice the profession shall be
rejected. The Department or its contracted vendor shall calculate each
candidate's grade utilizing the scoring key or adjusted scoring key, if
applicable, and shall provide each candidate with a grade report. The only
paper that shall be graded is the official answer sheet. No credit shall be
given for answers written in a candidate's examination booklet.
(9) If after the distribution of grades for a
particular administration there are adjustments to the scoring, amended grade
reports shall be mailed to all failing candidates whose scores are increased
and to all candidates whose pass/fail status changes due to the adjustment
unless the candidate has taken and passed a subsequent administration of the
examination.
(10) The Department
shall notify the candidate of the results of the candidate's examination no
later than sixty (60) days after the examination date, except when the grades,
or portions thereof, are computed by the national board, council, association,
or society responsible for a national examination in Florida. The grades for an
examination containing a national portion shall be sent to the candidate no
later than thirty (30) days after the receipt of the grades by the Department
from the national board, council, association, or society responsible for the
national examination in Florida.
(11) The Department or contracted vendor
shall inform each passing candidate of the candidate's status and provide
necessary instructions for obtaining a license.
(12) Any candidate who does not receive a
passing score on a licensure or certification examination will be notified of
the test(s) failed, the requirements for re-examination, and review and appeal
rights and procedures.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 472.0131 FS. Law Implemented 472.0131 FS.
New 1-3-80, Amended 6-9-80, 8-27-81, 1-25-84, Formerly 21HH-4.04, Amended 8-30-92, Formerly 21HH-4.004, Amended 5-30-95, 11-15-95, 7-27-00, 10-31-08, Formerly 61G17-4.004, Amended 10-17-12, 11-13-17.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.