ARE® 5.0 PjM Study Materials

Project Management (PjM)

Black Spectacles members pass ARE 5.0 PjM at a 36% higher rate than the NCARB-published national average.

Project Management (PjM)
Pass Rate

Black Spectacles
NCARB National Avg

 89%

 53%


⚠️ Updated February 2023 

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NCARB-Approved ARE 5.0 PjM Study Materials

Black Spectacles has the first ARE® 5.0 Project Management (PjM) study materials with the NCARB stamp of approval. Prepare with Video Lectures, ARE 5.0 PjM Practice Exams, Digital Flashcards and Practical Application Videos. Study on your own schedule, or with your peers in one of our Virtual Workshops. All materials are designed by ARE® veterans, and are built in alignment with NCARB’s exam objectives.

  Digital Flash Cards

  Practice Exams

  Virtual Workshops

  Practical Applications

  Video Lectures

  Quizzes

ARE 5.0 PjM Practice Exams

PRACTICE EXAMS

Make sure you're ready for test day

Our practice exams are designed to replicate the real thing, so come test day you'll know exactly what to expect. 

Take practice exams to check your understanding and practice timing, pacing, and case study strategy for test day. 

 

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More Project Management (PjM) Study Materials

Video Lectures

Prepare for all divisions of the ARE® with our video lecture series. Licensed instructors walk you through concepts that'll show up on the exam and how to solve them.

Flashcards

If you learn best by repetition, digital flashcards are for you. Learn key terms and vocabulary, all hand-picked to tackle a concept on the exam.

Virtual Workshops

Each week a licensed architect coach hosts a live virtual workshop to walk through tough problems and answer your questions—all in a group setting. 

Practical Applications

Practical application videos take the theories you've been learning and put them into practice. See how concepts translate into real life—and into real structures.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I buy access to study materials for just this division of the ARE?

Membership tiers always include access to study content for all 6 divisions. We do not sell memberships for a single ARE division.

Which ARE division should I start with?

Nobody knows your strengths better than yourself. We advise to become familiar with the NCARB Guidelines and listen to our ARE Live episode on ARE testing order and strategy.

Does Black Spectacles cover exactly what I'll be tested on during exam day?

Our study content is built around the objectives of each division as shared in the NCARB Guidelines. The same as candidates registered for the exams, Black Spectacles is not privy to any actual exam questions or content outside of the documented objectives of each exam.

We do develop our questions in the same way that NCARB does - they’re written by architects, reviewed by other architects, as well as a psychometrician and proofreader. We analyze our questions and make adjustments often based on data from your practice exam performance.

Check Out Our Free ARE 5.0 Project Management (PjM) Study Materials

PjM Case Study

Learn how to navigate PjM case studies on the ARE. Go through sample questions in real time and get study tips for passing the ARE.

Get your licensure over with. Start studying with NCARB-approved ARE exam prep.

What is the ARE® 5.0 Project Management (PjM) Exam?

Project management (PjM) tests your ability to independently manage an architectural project. This includes organizing principles, managing contracts, and managing consultants. You'll also learn about issues about office standards, the development of project teams, and overall control of client, fee, and risk management. 

While preparing for this division, you'll learn how to demonstrate understanding and ability in quality control, project team configuration, and scheduling. This division includes five sections: resource management, project work planning, contracts, project evaluation, and project quality control. Here, we'll break down what you can expect from each section. 

 

Number of Items
75
Test Duration
3 hours
Allotted Break Time
30 minutes
Total Appointment Time
3 hours 40 minutes

Table of Contents

Section 1: Resource Management

At the start of a project, you’ll need to assemble your internal and external team to execute the work. You’ll rely heavily on AIA contracts for this, which will provide guidance on your scope of work, including which consultants you need to hire, as well as the schedule and fee for the project. You can use this information to prepare a work plan, which will guide who will work on the project and for how long.

2 content areas to prepare for resource management: 

1. Determine criteria required to assemble team
When you're hired to design a project, you'll need to assess what portions of the work you need to hire a consultant for, as well as what you can complete in-house and how many staff hours you'll need to allocate to complete it. In this section, you'll learn how to decide between in-house staff and consultants or contractors, how to assign work based on skill-sets, and how to break down the project scope. 

2. Assess criteria required to allocate and manage project resources
Once you have an idea of the scope of the project and the resources you'll have available to you, then you have to allocate those resources to different stages of the project. Doing this appropriately is a delicate balance: you need to allocate enough resources to the project so it can be completed to the quality standard that’s required, while keeping in mind the fee and profitability for the form. In this section you'll learn about the different stages of budgeting, get an understanding of billable hours, and learn how to build—and stick to—a project schedule. 


Section 2: Project Work Planning

The work plan is a core document to managing an architectural project. It’s the central project management tool to track the schedule, fee, and firm resources being allocated to a particular project. You’ll need to be familiar with how to read and put one together, as this document shows up frequently on the PjM division.

4 content areas to prepare for project work planning: 

1. Develop and maintain project work plan
Work plans include all the tasks and assignments that need to be completed in order for a project to be successful. This can include things like design tasks, client meetings, consultant assignments, and a lot more. This objective will walk through different kinds of project work plans, what should be included on them, and how they may change over the course of a project. 

3. Determine criteria required to develop and maintain project schedule
Architects can’t control every part of the design schedule, so it’s important to include time in the project schedule for tasks like client review, regulatory submissions, and testing of materials or assemblies. In this section, you'll learn how to create your project schedules with enough time allotted for the possible detours a project can take. 

4. Determine appropriate communication to project team—owner, contractor, consultants and internal staff
During the course of a design project, project stakeholders will look toward you as the architect for guidance and information. You’ll need to be organized, with clear channels of communication throughout the project. This includes preparing for meetings by issuing agendas, documenting those meetings with minutes, and corresponding with project stakeholders via email and memo. In this section you'll get an overview of all the different ways you can document a project, why it matters, and how you can keep yourself organized. 


Section 3: Contracts

There are so many different parties involved in a design and construction project—the owner, architect, contractor, and various consultants. Every parties responsibility towards another party should be outlined in a widely accepted contract, typically an AIA contract. This section covers the major contracts that you’ll be expected to be able to interpret on this division.

4 content areas to prepare for contracts: 

1. Evaluate and verify adherence to owner/architect agreement
To make sure everyone is on the same page before a project starts, it's important that as the architect, you have an understanding of all the different contracts in play. In this section, we'll discuss the various terms that may be included in different kinds of contracts, what to watch out for, and how contracts impact the life of a project. 

2. Interpret key elements of, and verify adherence to architect/consultant agreement
When there are multiple contracts at play in a given project, you want to make sure everyone signing has a solid understanding of what they agree to. Here, you'll learn to understand the elements of the architect/consultant agreement, as well as understand how to review those terms with other parties. 

3. Interpret key elements of the owner/contractor agreement
While you’re not party to the AIA A101 contract between the owner and the contractor, you still need to know it well in order to administer the contract for construction. In this section, you'll learn what areas are your responsibility as the architect, what you can be held liable for, and what other parties are responsible for. 

4. Interpret key elements of the owner/architect agreement to integrate the consultant’s work into the project
Working with consultants hired directly by the owner differs from working with your own consultants. In this section, you’ll learn to understand that difference, when to get the owner involved if you need to, and how incorporate the owner’s consultant’s work into the project documents.

 

Section 4: Project Execution

Setting up your project with a work plan and the appropriate contracts is one thing, but executing the project according to those documents is another. In this section, you’ll pull it all together to evaluate the project at various stages of design.
 

4 content areas to prepare for project execution: 

1. Evaluate compliance with construction budget
Designing a project according to your client’s budget is an often overlooked responsibility of the architect. This section will walk through how to evaluate the design and the cost of work estimates at various stages to determine that they’re in alignment, and make adjustments if they’re not. 

2. Evaluate and address changes in scope of work and scope creep
Scope creep occurs when the architect takes on new responsibilities throughout the course of a project—but they weren't accounted for initially. This is problematic from a profitability and liability standpoint. In this objective, you’ll learn how to spot scope creep when it happens, and learn how to avoid it in the future. 

3. Evaluate project documentation to ensure it supports the specified delivery method
It’s important to always remember the ultimate use of your drawings and specifications: to convey the design intent of the project to the builder. In this objective, you’ll learn how to evaluate whether the project documentation is progressing towards that ultimate goal.

4. Identify and conform with the requirements set forth by authorities having jurisdiction in order to obtain approvals for the project
You’ll need to coordinate with the authority having jurisdiction, or AHJ, in order to get your design approved. This means submitting the project documents according to their required format, responding to their questions or concerns, and updating your documentation to obtain approval. This objective will walk through the different compliance areas you need to consider, and give you tools to make sure you're accounting for them. 

 

Section 5: Project Quality Control

Managing the quality of a project is necessary to ensure that you’re providing your services according to the standard of care. Implementing a solid QA/QC process codifies this procedure so that every project has the proper oversight, mitigating risk for the firm.
 

4 content areas to prepare for project quality control: 

1. Apply procedures required for adherence to laws and regulations relating to the project
Determining what codes, laws, and ordinances govern your project is the first step towards compliance. At the same time, you’ll also need to be able to define procedures for ensuring code compliance throughout the design of a project. In this section, you'll learn different ways you can go about ensuring this compliance, and how to adjust course if needed. 

2. Identify steps in maintaining project quality control, and reducing risks and liabilities
Your work plan has a couple key components—there's the actual work, but there's also a lot of other communication that needs to happen to make sure all codes are being met and that you're limiting your liability. This section will walk through different areas you need to include and why. 

3. Perform quality control reviews of project documentation throughout life of project
Performing quality control reviews of your project documentation, as well as the consultants, helps mitigate risk throughout the project. This section will discuss how defining how often these reviews occur, who conducts them, and the procedure they follow is an important aspect of managing a project.

4. Evaluate management of the design process to maintain integrity of design objectives
All of the administrative procedures that go into mitigating risk are important—but they need to be considered in concert with the design as well. This section will walk through how to balance design intent with practical considerations, so you can maintain the design objectives of the project and produce something you and your client are satisfied with. 

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