Personal Technology Information |
|
Cisco Certification: Taking Your First Certification Exam
Youâ??ve studied hard; youâ??ve practiced your configurations; youâ??ve used your flash cards over and over again; and finally, the big day is here. Your first certification exam! For many Cisco certification candidates, their first exam is the CCNA Composite exam or one of the two exams that make up the CCNA, the Introduction To Networking exam or the ICND (Interconnecting Cisco Networking Devices) exam. Walking into a testing center for the first time can be a nerve-wracking experience. Youâ??ve got enough on your mind just keeping all that new information straight without worrying about what the testing experience will be like. Youâ??re not there to take the exam. Youâ??re there to pass the exam. With this aggressive attitude in mind, letâ??s take a look at what you should expect (and not expect) when taking your first Cisco certification exam. Be Early and Bring Your ID. If the testing center is not in a part of town that you drive to in the morning, and youâ??ve got a 9 AM exam, you may find the traffic is much heavier that time of morning than you expected. Driving up to the testing center 10 minutes late is not a good way to get started. If youâ??ve never been to the center before, check their website for directions, or call them for directions. If at all possible, drive to the center the night before your exam. Make sure to bring your wallet or purse. You cannot take the exam without proper identification. Youâ??ll probably be asked for two forms of ID, one of which must be a picture ID. The Testing Room Despite the best efforts of VUE and Prometric, some testing center rooms are afterthoughts. I strongly advise that if youâ??re taking your exam at a technical school, ask to see the testing room BEFORE you sign up for the exam. If it looks like a converted broom closet, it probably is. Those rooms also tend to be right next to classrooms, which can result in distracting noise during your exam. If your testing center specializes in giving computer-based exams rather than classes, youâ??re probably in good shape. Again, feel free to drop by the testing center before your exam to take a peek at the testing room. Most testing rooms have a window that employees use to keep an eye on testers, and you should be able to take a peek through the window. When you go in, youâ??ll be asked to enter your social security number as your testing ID. Once you do that, the exam engine starts running. However, this doesnâ??t mean the test starts. The Survey When you take a Cisco exam, youâ??ll first be presented with a survey. The survey consists of 10 â?" 20 questions asking about your background, preparation methods, and comfort level with different technologies. This is a good time to catch your breath before starting the exam. The survey will only take about five minutes, and this time does not count against your exam time. Pay Attention To The Exam Tutorials Youâ??ll then be presented with an exam tutorial, showing you how to answer the different types of questions Cisco may ask. While most of these questions types are common sense (multiple choice, single answer, fill-in-the-blank), I strongly urge you to pay special attention to the router simulator question tutorial. The simulator questions carry more weight than the other questions; indeed, itâ??s almost impossible to pass the CCNA exams if you totally miss the simulator questions. While the interface for these exams is intuitive, sometimes students who fail their exam complain that they were not given enough information to answer the question. The real problem is that they didnâ??t look in the right place for that information. Itâ??s not hidden, but spend a few minutes with the tutorial and do not go forward until youâ??re comfortable with the simulator interface. The Exam Itself Finally, the exam starts! Remember, youâ??re not being asked anything you donâ??t know. If you have prepared correctly with the right tools, youâ??ll have a passing grade on your screen before you know it. Speaking of that grade, youâ??ll be presented with it about five seconds after you answer the final question. Cisco exams no longer allow CCNA and CCNP candidates to go back once a question is answered, so be prepared for that. Knowing what to expect when you go into the testing room for the first time will magnify your chances of success. Work hard (and smart!) while studying, achieve a combination of theoretical knowledge and hands-on work with real Cisco routers, and you are on your way to exam success! Chris Bryant, CCIE (TM) #12933, has been active in the Cisco certification community for years. He has written several books that have helped CCNA candidates around the world achieve the coveted CCNA certification, including several concentrating on binary math conversions and subnetting questions that the average CCNA candidate will need to answer on their CCNA exams. He is the owner of The Bryant Advantage (http://www.thebryantadvantage.com) where he teaches affordable world-class CCNA courses via the Internet, and sells his popular Cisco certification books. Heâ??s proud to have helped CCNA candidates around the world achieve their career goals. Mr. Bryantâ??s books and courses are sold on his site, on eBay, and on several other major Cisco certification sites.
MORE RESOURCES: What I Got Wrong in a Decade of Predicting the Future of Tech The Wall Street Journal Smartphones Can Now Last 7 Years. Here's How to Keep Them Working. The New York Times iPad Pro vs. MacBook: The Great Apple Laptop Trade-Off The Wall Street Journal Opinion | Technology Hates Me The New York Times In the City, Personal Safety Starts With Your Smartphone The Wall Street Journal Jonathan Haidt's 'The Anxious Generation': Tech, Smartphones Cause Teen Anxiety - WSJ The Wall Street Journal Tech That Will Change Your Life in 2024, From AI to EV - WSJ The Wall Street Journal The AI Gadget That Can Make Your Life Better—and Two That Definitely Won't The Wall Street Journal Want to Get More Done? That Podcast in the Background Is Holding You Back The Wall Street Journal How TikTok Is Wiring Gen Z's Money Brain The Wall Street Journal OpenAI Made AI Videos for Us. These Clips Are Good Enough to Freak Us Out. - The Wall Street Journal OpenAI Made AI Videos for Us. These Clips Are Good Enough to Freak Us Out. The Wall Street Journal Apple's New iPad Pro vs. New iPad Air vs. iPad: Why Are There So Many? The Wall Street Journal The Invisible $1.52 Trillion Problem: Clunky Old Software The Wall Street Journal After a Sugar High of Free Money, These Billion-Dollar Technologies Need a Nap The Wall Street Journal Huawei's latest smartphone mostly made in China The Register We Aren't Posting on Social Media as Much Anymore. Will We Ever? The Wall Street Journal The Tech to Help You Beat Your Tech Addictions The Wall Street Journal Tech Hubs Are Losing the Talent War to Everywhere Else The Wall Street Journal iPhone Fixes to Make if You're the Family IT Department This Year The Wall Street Journal What Kind of Driver Will Your Kid Be? This Test Can Tell. The Wall Street Journal AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile US fined $200M for selling off people's location info - The Register I Bought the World's Hottest High-Tech E-Bike. Then Its Maker Went Bankrupt. The Wall Street Journal Hands Off! With $3500 Headsets in the Wild, New Social Norms Apply The Wall Street Journal Apple's New Face Computer Is for Work The Wall Street Journal Schools Want to Ban Phones. Parents Say No. The Wall Street Journal Niklaus Wirth, Who Inspired a Generation of Computer Programmers, Dies at 89 The Wall Street Journal Vision Pro Review: Apple's First Headset Lacks Polish and Purpose The New York Times He Stole Hundreds of iPhones and Looted People's Life Savings. He Told Us How. The Wall Street Journal The Accounting Technology Lab Podcast: Personal Tech at CES 2024 CPAPracticeAdvisor.com Boys Are Struggling. It Can Take Coaches, Tutors and Thousands a Month to Fix That. The Wall Street Journal 100 Cool Tech Gadgets in 2024, According to a Tech Expert BestProducts.com 12 Apps We Can't Stop Using, for Better or Worse The Wall Street Journal Best Tech Gifts of 2023 to Buy This Holiday Season, an Updated List - WSJ The Wall Street Journal Yun-Hee Kim promoted to Tech Editor, Corporate and Personal Technology The Washington Post The Four Steps to Better Password Security The Wall Street Journal Testing Apple’s Vision Pro The New York Times Turn On Your iPhone's Stolen Device Protection Now to Secure Your Money and Photos in iOS 17.3 Update - WSJ The Wall Street Journal Meta’s Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Use AI to See, Hear and Speak. What Are They Like? The New York Times Snapchat's Friend-Ranking Feature Adds to Teen Anxiety The Wall Street Journal A Pain-Free Way to Secure All Your Online Accounts The Wall Street Journal Is the $139 Amazon Prime Subscription Still Worth It? The Wall Street Journal The Apple Video Feature Awkwardly Crashing Your Meetings - WSJ The Wall Street Journal What if You Never Had to Charge Your Gadgets Again? The Wall Street Journal The most personal technology | Jul 22nd 2023 The Economist Quick Tips to Save Time on the Telephone The New York Times Apple’s iOS 17.3 Stolen Device Protection Update Aims to Stop iPhone Thieves The Wall Street Journal Don't rent out that container ship yet: CIOs and biz buyers view AI PCs with some caution The Register Do You Have Painful 'Tech Neck?' This Expert-Approved Gadget Might Help The Wall Street Journal The Most Important Tech Company You've Never Heard of Is a Major Reason Computers Keep Getting Faster The Wall Street Journal Faster, Beefier, Cheaper: The Next-Generation Electric Skateboards Have Arrived The Wall Street Journal Meta Welcomes Headset War With Apple - WSJ The Wall Street Journal Meta and Google Are Betting on AI Voice Assistants. Will They Take Off? The New York Times Distracted, Forgetful and Hooked on Smartphones: Why More Women Are Being Diagnosed With ADHD The Wall Street Journal Yes, It's Rude to Use Your Laptop During Meetings—and More Tech Etiquette Rules You Might Be Breaking The Wall Street Journal You're Brewing It Wrong: The Coffee-Making Myths That Might Be Holding You Back The Wall Street Journal How to Cut Down Your Screen Time but Still Get Stuff Done The New York Times Why Tech Companies Are Not Your Friends: Lessons From Roku The New York Times BASICally still alive: Classic language celebrates 60 years with new code and old quirks The Register New Tech That Asks 'Are You Sure About Sending a Nude Photo?' The Wall Street Journal How to Make Your Phone Last Forever: 6 Simple Tips The Wall Street Journal People Are Ditching Dating Apps to Find Love on…Duolingo? The Wall Street Journal One Month With Apple Vision Pro: In the Air, on a Train and…in a Drawer The Wall Street Journal |
RELATED ARTICLES
How To Have Two (Multiple) Copies Of Windows Having two operating systems is not as difficult as many of us consider. It just requires little hard work and some good equipment. A Tale of Two Regeds Tech support tells me to type 'regedt32' as opposed to 'regedit' to access the registry from the command line (Start > Run). I question the use of 'regedt32,' but he says to do it anyway. Do Higher Digital Camera Prices Mean Better Cameras? Understanding digital camera prices makes finding the best camera value much easier. Uncovering digital cameras best buys is easier if we know what's available within various price ranges. A Peek Into the Near Future of Electronics Technology How long do you think DVDs have around? 20 years? 10 years? Actually, they have only been around for about seven years, but it seems like they have been around much longer. Many of us can hardly remember life before DVDs. Password Nightmares Good Morning Mr. Sampson. USB Drives - What to Look For in a USB Device Those small USB drives have so many names, pocket drives, thumb drives, USB Pen, Jump drives, and several other names, but when it comes down to it, we are all talking about a small portable, reusable storage media that fits in the palm of your hand!There are a couple major factors you should consider when you select a USB drive. The size of the storage media you require, and the size and shape of the device itself. Emulation Manual - A Complete Guide on How to Change Your Windows XP to Mac OS X IntroductionMac OS X is the most technologically advanced operating system by Apple. The use of soft edges, translucent colors and pinstripes (similar to the hardware of the first iMacs) brought more color and texture to the windows and controls on the desktop which is what windows lack. The Advantages of Portable MP3 Players With their solid-state technology, compact size, and abundant memory, portable mp3 players are the state of the art in portable music systems.Most portable mp3 players feature storage systems that have no moving parts. Consumer Electronic Information: The Basics of the DLP Projector Projectors have come a long way in the past few decades. The desktop fossils that were once used to show home moviesor classroom filmstrips are a thing of the past. Cisco Certification: What To Expect On Exam Day Cisco Certification: Taking Your First Certification ExamYou've studied hard; you've practiced your configurations; you've used your flash cards over and over again; and finally, the big day is here. Your first certification exam!For many Cisco certification candidates, their first exam is the CCNA Composite exam or one of the two exams that make up the CCNA, the Introduction To Networking exam or the ICND (Interconnecting Cisco Networking Devices) exam. Web Standards HTTP ProtocolThe web is run on port 80. You are probably wondering what "port 80" is, right (whether you actually are or not is irrelevant)? Well, the answer is easy (not really). Plasma TV vs LCD TV For those seeking to buy their first flat panel TVdisplay device, it is easy to be confused with conflicting and counter claims bydifferent interest parties. So what is the truth in the competition between LCDand Plasma TV? Here's are some pointers before you rush out and buy your flatpanel TV on impulse . Basic Computer Thermodynamics That desk in front of you and everything else around you is made up of atoms. An atom consists of electrons orbiting around a nucleus. Buying a Home Theater Receiver Buying a receiver is one of the most important decisions you're going to have to make when building your home theater. The receiver has a number of functions including; connecting and switching audio sources; connecting and switching video sources; decoding surround sound formats; amplifying an audio signal and sending it to your speakers; tuning in to radio stations; and acting as the interface between you and your home theater. A Lesson in HTML As the owner of a Country Mall and Top Site List, I have been asked several times about what to put in the sign up form when it asks for the URL or the HTML of a banner or other image. I have people that email me feeling totally lost and have no idea what they mean! Actually, it is very easy once you know WHAT they are talking about and HOW to do what they want you to do. Image Conversion In Computers JPEG, GIFF/JIFF, BMP, and TIFF are the most commonly used formats for storing still image files such as photographs, graphics, and drawings.JPEG stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group and is a standard for image compression. Help, I Need a New HDTV! (Part 2 of 5) Feeling overwhelmed in selecting a new TV? With all the choices these days, you may feel like, "Where do I start?!"In part 2 of our 5 part article, we the discuss the options in TV technologies---Plasma. Plasma technology contains millions of "pixels" that contain a rare natural gas. 10 Time Saving Keyboard Shortcuts Time is money. And when you constantly have to divide your time between your mouse and your keyboard, your workflow rate really slows down. Simple Overview Of Computer Computer is an electronic machine work on the instructions of human being. In other words you have to input data to get your required output. Help, I Need a New HDTV! (Part 4 of 5) Feeling overwhelmed in selecting a new TV? With all the choices these days, you may feel like, "Where do I start?!"In part 4 of our 5 part article, we the discuss "do I really need an HDTV?"---Right now, stations are moving towards HDTV programming. Although available for free over the air in major metropolitan areas, this process will take a few years to fully unfold. |
home | site map |
© 2006 |