I passed the LEED Professional Accreditation exam.
So that's nice.
So for those hunched over Google in panic before taking it yourselves...hello. Everyone else can skip the next paragraph.
I found the Colorado Chapter's study guide excellent, the exam they provide for LEED v2.2 is a great preparation tool - it's heavy on the narrative questions and will have you hunting through the reference guide in search of deeper understanding, which is great. Watch out for swallowing all their answers whole - a couple of answers are, in my opinion, flat out wrong, but that could be down to typos more than anything. I haven't checked the errata.
The study guide was the best resource for usefulness per page - it has all the details of the LEED project procedures, CIRs, all of it. And there are plenty of questions on that stuff in the exam.
That and read the LEED Reference Guide. And again. And again. Until you can see the font in your dreams. Sounds dumb, but I passed with a 189 out of 200. So it works.
That's all, really. Good luck!
So...yeah! That's that done, and there are no exams on the horizon until April, and I'm going to need all that time to study - it's the Engineering Fundamentals exam you have to take as the first step to Professional Engineer status, which is roughly equivalent to Chartership in the UK. It's intended as an exam people take at or close to graduation - all the really technical stuff. And of course I wasn't IN the US when I graduated, so I have to wind myself back up to just-graduated levels on all that subject matter...and in Imperial Units.
Anyone for a metric revolution?
In the next eight months?
Please?


Shana wanted to comment with this link:
http://www.bountee.com/members/design/view.jsp?id=5419
Which is awesome.
Eugh. Sorry, but having to do engineering in Imperial Units is on a level with having to do engineering whilst DRESSED AS A CLOWN AND BEING PELTED BY EGGS.
Got it in one, Mr. G.
Congratulations!