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A contractor completes a continuing education course on business law that is 6 hours long. How many hours of the 14-hour biennial requirement does this satisfy?

Correct Answer

B) 6 hours (full course credit)

Florida allows the full 6 hours of business law continuing education to count toward the 14-hour biennial requirement, provided the course is approved by the Construction Industry Licensing Board.

Answer Options
A
4 hours (maximum business law credit)
B
6 hours (full course credit)
C
7 hours (half of total requirement)
D
3 hours (minimum technical requirement)

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Florida regulations allow contractors to receive full credit for approved continuing education courses toward their biennial requirement. When a contractor completes a 6-hour business law course that is approved by the Construction Industry Licensing Board, they receive the complete 6 hours of credit. There is no reduction or cap that would limit the credit to less than the actual course hours, as long as the course meets approval requirements.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 4 hours (maximum business law credit)

This option incorrectly suggests there is a 4-hour maximum cap on business law credits. Florida does not impose such a limitation on business law continuing education courses.

Option C: 7 hours (half of total requirement)

This option confuses the credit hours with a mathematical relationship to the total requirement. The credit earned is based on actual course hours completed, not a percentage of the total biennial requirement.

Option D: 3 hours (minimum technical requirement)

This option incorrectly references a 'minimum technical requirement' and provides an arbitrary 3-hour credit that has no basis in Florida continuing education regulations.

Memory Technique

Think 'Full Credit for Full Course' - if you complete the entire approved course, you get credit for all hours attended.

Reference Hint

Florida Statutes Chapter 489 - Contracting, specifically sections dealing with continuing education requirements for general contractors

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