The Future Of Computer Certification Exams

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The format and problem of computer certification exams is continually changing. There was no such thing like a simulator question, when I got my first certification exam (Novell NetWare 3.1x CNA, January 1997), and my practical skills actually weren't tested. The examinations then were much weightier on memorization.

One factor that helped replace that was that the Novell tests were flexible. If you missed a question on a certain topic, you would continue being asked questions about this topic until you got it right. You couldn't afford to be poor in any topic, because the exam would almost certainly find that out and keep hitting you with issues on that topic until you failed.

Contributing to the stress, after a certain amount of questions your exam can stop anytime. You'd no idea exactly how many questions you'd get, just that you would get at the very least 1-5. Every time you hit the "next" switch after question 15, you did not know if you'd get another question or if the assessment could suddenly stop and give a pass to you or fail answer. This fine salary of a phlebotomist wiki has many surprising lessons for how to ponder this activity.

Times have changed. Cisco has led the way in presenting simulation concerns to their exams, where in fact the prospect is offered a simulation of the switch or network and asked to perform tasks that a person who is ready to make that certification should be able to perform. Learn further on our favorite related encyclopedia - Click here: Wage For The New Grad | The Green Wave. Compared to the checks were nine years ago this is a far better test of experience. If you think you know anything at all, you will maybe hate to discover about Cisco CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: OSPF Route Redistribution Review | Sifang Tongda.

What'll be another "big jump" in computer accreditation checks? To generate the world's most difficult technical accreditation, the CCIE, the candidate must first pass a rigorous 100-question diploma exam, and must then pass a functional lab exam. The choice is offered a challenging set of network requirements and must build that network on a pod of Cisco routers and switches in under ten hours.

This is just personal opinion and perhaps not "insider information", but I believe the day will come when the CCNA, CCNP, and other Cisco certifications will need some type of hands-on practical lab to make the certification. What better way to try proficiency than to get to do duties on real Cisco equipment? There would be more expense for Cisco with this specific form of testing, since lab gear and lab proctors would be required, but the already-prized CCNA and CCNP would become that much more important at work if employers knew that to make that accreditation, the task candidate had to pass a hands-on examination.

This would benefit the individuals as-well, since it would do an even better work in protecting their investment in time and money. This could even be the next thing in ferretting out individuals who make an effort to get past the CCNA and CCNP examinations via braindumps. As I tell my clients and students, when you're standing facing that router or switch, there's no multiple choice.. you either know it or you do not!

Chris Bryant

CCIE #12933.Chris Wallace Medical-Assistant-Training.org San Francisco, CA 94105 575 Market Street, Suite 3000 (415) 209-5257

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