AND ANSWERS 2026 | Construction Quality
Management for Contractors | Practice Test |
Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: CQM Fundamentals and Terminology
Questions 1-10
Question 1 What is the primary purpose of Construction Quality Management (CQM) on federal
construction projects?
A. To reduce construction costs
B. To ensure that work is performed in accordance with contract requirements [CORRECT]
C. To speed up project completion
D. To eliminate the need for Government oversight
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The primary purpose of CQM is to ensure that all work is performed in accordance
with contract requirements, specifications, and drawings. While effective CQM may indirectly
affect costs (A) and schedule (C), these are secondary outcomes, not primary purposes.
Government oversight (D) is still required through the QA function—CQM does not eliminate
this but rather ensures the contractor's work meets standards before QA verification. The CQM
system creates a structured approach where the contractor takes responsibility for quality,
reducing the likelihood of nonconforming work being discovered late in the process.
Question 2 In USACE construction terminology, Quality Control (QC) is performed by:
A. The Government
B. The Contractor [CORRECT]
C. A third-party testing agency
D. The architect/engineer
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Quality Control (QC) is exclusively the contractor's responsibility to ensure their
own work meets contract requirements before offering it for Government acceptance. Quality
,Assurance (QA) is performed by the Government (USACE) to verify the effectiveness of the
contractor's QC system. While third-party testing agencies (C) may perform tests under contract
to the contractor, they are acting as part of the contractor's QC organization. The
architect/engineer (D) may provide design QA but does not perform construction QC. This
distinction is fundamental to the CQM system: the contractor controls quality, the Government
assures it.
Question 3 A QC Plan must be submitted by the contractor and approved by the Government
before:
A. Any work begins [CORRECT]
B. The contract is awarded
C. Final payment
D. The preparatory phase
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The QC Plan must be submitted and approved before any work begins on site. This
plan outlines the contractor's entire approach to quality control, including organization chart,
personnel qualifications, procedures, documentation, and three-phase control implementation.
Submitting before award (B) is impossible as the contractor must first be selected. Waiting until
final payment (C) defeats the purpose. The preparatory phase (D) is part of the work itself—
approval must precede all work including the first preparatory phase meeting. Early submission
allows Government review and ensures QC systems are in place before construction starts.
Question 4 The QC Manager must have which of the following qualifications?
A. A high school diploma only
B. Experience in construction quality control and authority to act on behalf of the contractor
[CORRECT]
C. A law degree
D. No specific requirements
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The QC Manager must have demonstrated experience in construction quality control
and must have the authority to act on behalf of the contractor to stop work, order corrective
action, and enforce QC requirements. This authority is critical—without it, the QC Manager
cannot effectively implement the QC program. A high school diploma alone (A) is insufficient
without experience. A law degree (C) is not required. "No specific requirements" (D) is incorrect
as USACE contracts specify QC Manager qualifications including experience, training, and
authority.
, Question 5 The difference between inspection and testing is:
A. There is no difference
B. Inspection is visual examination of work characteristics; testing is physical measurement of
properties [CORRECT]
C. Inspection is done by the Government; testing by the contractor
D. Testing is visual; inspection is physical
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Inspection involves visual examination, dimensional verification, and comparison to
requirements (observing rebar placement, checking alignment). Testing involves physical
measurement of material properties through standardized procedures (concrete compressive
strength, soil compaction, weld strength). Both are QC functions (not split by
Government/contractor as in C). Testing is not visual (D). Understanding this distinction ensures
proper application of both activities—some work requires only inspection, some requires testing,
and some requires both.
Question 6 Acceptance criteria for construction work are found in:
A. Only the contractor's internal standards
B. The contract specifications, drawings, and referenced industry standards [CORRECT]
C. The QC Manager's personal preferences
D. Previous project experience
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Acceptance criteria are explicitly defined in the contract documents—specifications,
drawings, and incorporated references (ASTM, ACI, AWS, etc.). These are the legally binding
standards against which work is measured. Contractor internal standards (A) may exceed these
but cannot replace them. Personal preferences (C) and previous experience (D) are not
contractually valid acceptance criteria. QC personnel must know where to find criteria for each
definable feature of work and apply them consistently.
Question 7 The relationship between QC and QA is best described as:
A. They are the same function
B. QC is the contractor's responsibility to check their own work; QA is the Government's
verification of QC effectiveness [CORRECT]
C. QC is more important than QA
D. QA performs the work and QC checks it