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How to build an ARE study schedule that actually works starts with understanding what the exam really requires, and it's not what most ARE exam prep companies tell you.
After helping hundreds of candidates since 2013, I've learned that building a realistic ARE study schedule looks nothing like what NCARB or other prep programs describe. Passing all six exams is a 700 to 1,500 hour project. Most people take about three years. Nobody tells you that upfront, and that gap between expectation and reality is where most study schedules fall apart.
In this episode I walk through a step-by-step approach to creating a study schedule that fits your real life: how to show up consistently, how to use NCARB's own guidelines to study smarter, and the mindset shift that makes all the difference.
📝 Key topics covered:
How many hours it actually takes to pass the ARE (700 to 1,500)
Why failing a few exams is normal and doesn't set you back
How to use the ARE Guidelines as your real study guide
The difference between hard work and easy work studying
Why studying for all 6 exams at once almost never works
⏱️ Chapters:
(0:00) Introduction
(1:22) ARE Study Schedule Reality Check
(8:30) Step 1: Show Up Every Day and Build a Study Routine
(10:51) Step 2: Study NCARB Objectives First
(13:33) Step 3: Balanced Learning Approach
(16:21) Step 4: How to Pick Your Exam Date
(17:38) Step 5: The Final Week Before Your Exam
(19:09) ARE Study Schedule Misconceptions
(23:21) The Mindset That Changes Everything
📖 Read the full blog post
🎯 Get access to all ARE study materials with the ARE 101 Membership
🎯 Join our 10-week ARE Boot Camp
📚 Individual ARE Exam Courses:
PPD 101 (Project Planning and Design)
PDD 101 (Construction Documents and Specs)
Building Codes 101
Mechanical Systems 101
PcM 101 (Practice Management)
PjM 101 (Project Management)
CE 101 (Construction and Evaluation)
PA 101 (Programming and Analysis)
AIA Contracts 101
By Michael Riscica5
2323 ratings
How to build an ARE study schedule that actually works starts with understanding what the exam really requires, and it's not what most ARE exam prep companies tell you.
After helping hundreds of candidates since 2013, I've learned that building a realistic ARE study schedule looks nothing like what NCARB or other prep programs describe. Passing all six exams is a 700 to 1,500 hour project. Most people take about three years. Nobody tells you that upfront, and that gap between expectation and reality is where most study schedules fall apart.
In this episode I walk through a step-by-step approach to creating a study schedule that fits your real life: how to show up consistently, how to use NCARB's own guidelines to study smarter, and the mindset shift that makes all the difference.
📝 Key topics covered:
How many hours it actually takes to pass the ARE (700 to 1,500)
Why failing a few exams is normal and doesn't set you back
How to use the ARE Guidelines as your real study guide
The difference between hard work and easy work studying
Why studying for all 6 exams at once almost never works
⏱️ Chapters:
(0:00) Introduction
(1:22) ARE Study Schedule Reality Check
(8:30) Step 1: Show Up Every Day and Build a Study Routine
(10:51) Step 2: Study NCARB Objectives First
(13:33) Step 3: Balanced Learning Approach
(16:21) Step 4: How to Pick Your Exam Date
(17:38) Step 5: The Final Week Before Your Exam
(19:09) ARE Study Schedule Misconceptions
(23:21) The Mindset That Changes Everything
📖 Read the full blog post
🎯 Get access to all ARE study materials with the ARE 101 Membership
🎯 Join our 10-week ARE Boot Camp
📚 Individual ARE Exam Courses:
PPD 101 (Project Planning and Design)
PDD 101 (Construction Documents and Specs)
Building Codes 101
Mechanical Systems 101
PcM 101 (Practice Management)
PjM 101 (Project Management)
CE 101 (Construction and Evaluation)
PA 101 (Programming and Analysis)
AIA Contracts 101

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