If you’re preparing for the Hawaii Glazing Contractor (C-22) exam, the fastest way to build confidence is to study the real-world workflow glazing contractors live in every day: interpreting building requirements, planning safe installation, understanding architectural glass applications, choosing and using sealants correctly, and managing jobsite safety in active construction environments. Glazing is a finish trade, but it’s also a precision trade—small details affect water resistance, movement accommodation, appearance, and long-term performance. The C-22 exam is designed to confirm you understand those fundamentals and can apply professional judgment in scenario-style questions.
This C-22 Exam Book Package includes the exact references you listed, giving you an organized foundation for preparation without chasing scattered resources. You’ll use the International Building Code to build comfort with code-style language and construction terminology, the GANA Glazing Manual to strengthen glazing fundamentals and professional workflow thinking, the GANA Guide to Architectural Glass to reinforce glass types and application awareness, the GANA Sealant Manual to support sealant-related method reasoning, and OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 to reinforce the safety mindset required on real job sites.
You confirmed the exam format: this is a closed-book exam. That changes how you should prepare. On exam day you will not have your references available, so your goal is to build recall and decision speed. The best closed-book approach is structured repetition: read in short blocks, translate what you learn into jobsite-style notes, and drill prompts from memory until your answers become quick and consistent.
Glazing questions often reflect real contractor decisions: what should be verified before installation, what detail prevents leakage and callbacks, what choice supports durability, what sequence protects safety and finish quality, and what action is required before work proceeds. When you study with that contractor mindset—“best next step,” “most professional decision,” and “safest approach”—you retain more and answer faster.
This Exam Book Package supports candidates preparing for the Hawaii Glazing Contractor (C-22) exam using the reference titles you provided. Glazing work blends code awareness, technical understanding of glass and glazing systems, sealant and weatherproofing discipline, and jobsite safety responsibility. Most candidates prepare most effectively when they focus on contractor-ready competencies that match real project demands:
These references support those competencies from multiple angles so your preparation stays both practical and aligned with professional expectations.
The Hawaii C-22 exam is a closed-book test. You will not have your references available during the exam, so your success depends on recall and decision speed. Closed-book exams reward candidates who can recognize what the question is asking, apply jobsite reasoning, and choose the safest and most correct option quickly.
The most effective closed-book method is retrieval practice—testing yourself from memory before checking notes. Use these habits throughout your preparation:
Because glazing is detail-sensitive, this approach works extremely well. When you can quickly recall the correct sequence and identify the detail that prevents failure, you can eliminate wrong choices faster and answer with confidence.
Licensing steps can vary depending on applicant situation and administrative requirements, but most candidates stay on track when they plan the process in milestones and keep studying moving alongside paperwork. A practical approach is:
A predictable routine reduces stress. When your study plan is repeatable, your recall becomes stronger and your confidence grows steadily.
State requirements may include application steps, documentation expectations, approvals, and compliance considerations beyond exam preparation. The most reliable strategy is organization: keep a checklist, track key dates, and maintain copies of submitted documents in one place.
From a preparation standpoint, the advantage you control is consistency. Closed-book exams reward repeated review and the ability to apply contractor reasoning without needing to look anything up.
Because the C-22 exam is closed book, your goal is to convert reference content into recall-ready tools. Reading alone can feel productive, but recall is what matters under timed conditions. Your best study sessions produce something reusable: short summaries, quick checklists, and prompt drills you can repeat until answers become quick and consistent.
Use the 4-step study cycle for each topic:
Study glazing through contractor decision points
Glazing questions become easier when you can visualize the job. Organize your prompts around real decisions a glazing contractor makes:
Turn “details” into simple checklists
Glazing work is full of steps that can be turned into quick mental checklists, which is perfect for closed-book prep. For example:
Even if the exam doesn’t ask for a checklist, many questions are easier when you can mentally walk through what a professional would verify first.
How to use each reference efficiently
GANA Glazing Manual
Use this book as your method and workflow anchor. Convert what you read into “jobsite rules” that you can recall quickly: what to verify first, what sequence protects quality, and what common mistakes lead to defects. Then drill those rules as prompts until they become automatic.
GANA Guide to Architectural Glass
Use this reference to build comfort with glass types and application considerations. The goal is recognition speed. Create prompts like “What type of glass is most likely described?” and “What is the key consideration in this scenario?” This helps you interpret exam questions faster and eliminate wrong answers more confidently.
GANA Sealant Manual
Treat sealant preparation and application as performance-critical. Build prompts around “what prevents failure” and “what causes callbacks.” Many real-world glazing problems come down to missed prep steps or incorrect sequence. Scenario prompts work best here: “What should happen first?” and “What mistake causes leakage later?”
International Building Code (IBC)
Use the IBC as construction language training. Create a small glossary sheet of key terms you encounter and translate each into plain English. Drill that glossary weekly so terminology doesn’t slow you down under exam pressure.
OSHA 29 CFR 1926
Study OSHA through scenarios: hazard → control → safe outcome. Create prompts like “What is unsafe here?”, “What should happen first?”, and “What control reduces risk?” This builds fast hazard recognition and supports professional jobsite leadership.
A realistic weekly routine
Here’s a repeatable schedule many working candidates can maintain:
This routine supports closed-book success: repetition, recall practice, and contractor-style decision reasoning.
1 Exam Prep supports C-22 candidates with a structured approach designed for working professionals. Instead of studying randomly and hoping information sticks, you follow a repeatable system focused on organized study guidance, trade-focused reasoning, and practice-oriented preparation that strengthens recall over time.
The goal is realistic preparation: stronger recall, clearer reasoning, and more confidence under timed exam conditions—without unrealistic promises.
The Hawaii C-22 exam is a closed-book exam, so preparation should focus on recall and scenario reasoning.
This package includes International Building Code (2018), GANA Glazing Manual (50th Anniversary Edition), GANA Guide to Architectural Glass (2010), GANA Sealant Manual (2008 Edition), and OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926.
They matter because they shape the terminology, methods, and jobsite logic exam questions are built from. Studying from these references helps you build understanding and recall before exam day.
Study in short sections, write summaries in your own words, create prompts, and drill from memory before checking notes. Repetition and scenario practice are key for closed-book performance.
Study sealant work as performance prevention: focus on preparation and sequence. Create prompts around “what should happen first” and “what mistake causes leaks or callbacks.”
Use scenario prompts: identify the hazard, choose the control, and decide the safest next step. Repeating scenario drills weekly builds faster hazard recognition.
Shift toward mixed review. Cycle through prompts across all topics and spend extra time on your weakest areas until your answers become quick and consistent.