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...Home ... Editorial ... Columns ..Column Story Thursday: January 14, 2010
TechMentor Conferences


 Certification Advisor  
Greg Neilson
Greg Neilson


 Microsoft’s New Simulation Questions: Report from the Field
Greg takes on Microsoft's new simulation questions, shares his experience and invites you to do the same.
by Greg Neilson  
5/11/2005 -- In my last column I told you about my enthusiasm for the new simulation questions that Microsoft was introducing. Now that I’ve taken a Microsoft exam containing simulation questions, I wanted to share my experience with you.

There were a handful of simulation questions contained on the 70-290 exam I recently took. When preparing, I actually anticipated that there would be more on the exam, but now that I’ve taken it I see how time consuming these questions are to complete -- having more than a handful could easily have been overkill, detracting from the remainder of the exam content. Windows Server 2003 is a huge product, so there’s a great breadth of material to test candidates on.

Speaking of content, you’ll find no shortage of administration coverage on this exam. Aside from the simulations, there were a number of drag-and-drop and other questions where candidates are expected to use error messages or a properties page from the GUI to deliver the correct outcome. By my reckoning, approximately a quarter of the exam makes candidates work directly with the Windows Server 2003 GUI performing administration tasks -- this should go a long way to further refute the accusation that these exams lead to paper certifications and don’t test real-world skills.

The simulation questions themselves were straightforward, although they do take more time than a regular multiple choice question to complete, as mentioned above (you will still have plenty of time, though). The exam objectives suggest the types of exam questions you may be asked, so in that regard none of the simulation areas I encountered were completely unexpected.

As for the simulation technology itself, I thought it ran well, but I did run into a few things. For one, I found that the relevant admin tools for the simulation can only be launched from the normal Windows menus. When I attempted to launch a tool by name from the Run menu, I got a VBScript error. This isn't a big deal, but it is something to be aware of.

I also discovered an interesting side effect of the simulation software. When answering one of the simulation questions, I misread it and attempted to do something outside of what was being asked. Because I was working in a simulation environment and not the real Windows GUI, the simulation GUI didn’t respond to my action. This lack of response made me realize I’d read the question wrong: When nothing happened, I went back, read it again, and selected the correct option. In this situation, the limits of the simulation helped me; however, I would imagine that as Microsoft gets more experience in setting these types of questions, this “safety net” may not be something you can count on in the future.

Overall, I feel these new types of simulation exam questions are a good addition, but I don’t want to overstate their importance. They’re another welcome development in improving Microsoft’s certification testing, which was already pretty solid.

Before you take a Microsoft exam containing simulations, make sure you check out Microsoft’s demo that also functions as a tutorial here. Two of the current exams (70-290 and 70-291) currently contain simulations, with another two (70-293 and 70-294) scheduled to be updated by June. For those of you who have taken exams these new exams with simulations, let me know what you thought by posting your thoughts below. I’d also be interested in your general thoughts on how you think these questions will (or won’t) improve the validity of Microsoft testing.


Greg Neilson, MCSE+Internet, MCNE, PCLP, is a Contributing Editor for Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine and a manager at a large IT services firm in Australia. He's the author of Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell (O'Reilly and Associates, ISBN 1-56592-717-6). You can reach him at Attn: Greg.

 


More articles by Greg Neilson:

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There are 19 CertCities.com user Comments for “Microsoft’s New Simulation Questions: Report from the Field”
Page 2 of 2
6/8/05: Mayur from India says: Hi all i think ms has taken security, mcse 2 heart just see how much improvement has been done mcse nowonwards will rule and earn good salaries 2. now not any tom dick harries can pas the exms as was the case with nt exms.And by the salary rises with exp but 2 get a job u must have right qualifications and certs just signboards u ned to travel the path and hence certs r worth the money spent on
6/8/05: Mayur from India says: Hi all i think ms has taken security, mcse 2 heart just see how much improvement has been done mcse nowonwards will rule and earn good salaries 2. now not any tom dick harries can pas the exms as was the case with nt exms.And by the salary rises with exp but 2 get a job u must have right qualifications and certs just signboards u ned to travel the path and hence certs r worth the money spent on
6/14/05: Brian from Plano,TX says: I took the 70-290 exam and failed with a 612 the first time. I took it a week later and passed with a 700. After comparing my score reports from the 2 exams, I am convinced that the total number of available points on each exam differs. I wish that Microsoft would also add the number of correctly answered questions to the score report as well as the total points that were available. Seeing 700 makes me think I didn't do as well as the score report indicates. I don't really have any way of knowing which granular sections of each main category that I really need to address.
6/29/05: Anonymous says: If you are failing the 290 exam, try NOT doing any of the simulations. A friend of mine just took the exam and got a very high 900 score by skipping the simulation portion. Obviously doing the simulations is worse than not touching them. Don't know for how long, but it is worth a shot if you are failing and you think that you shouldn't be failing.
7/1/05: Eric says: I took the 70-290 exam and failed also with a 668. I think I answered most of the questions correctly except for the SIMS. The SIMS are poorly arranged, If the intentions for a real world situation for having sims, then i suggest you can use every aspect of the OS and not just buttons available because there are always mulitiple ways in completing a task.
7/13/05: Clem from Arizona says: I just took the demo simulation, Love It! It's a great tool to teach! Not to test. Practice always make it better, put this simulation to teach the Microsoft way instead of testing on exam that would make you fail anyhow!
8/11/05: Paul Mancuso says: It is interesting to hear people's comments on the simulation exams where at Microsoft's conference a few weeks back, a friend of mine took the tests with simulations. He realized that several flaws in two of the simulations and decided not to answer any of them as they were flawed. (Didnt have anything checked, clicked or done as he removed all answers). He scored over a 940 on the exams. I do not believe they are even scored at all currently. Therefore, those that are noticing lower scores or failure has little to do with scoring the simulations and more to do with wasting time on them till they are eventually scored. Funny to hear all of the comments about the simulation exams as if the simulations have some effect.
8/24/05: Anonymous from riyadh says: It's terrible exam nowadays with this new format, M$ is impossing the M$ way. It cost me a lot to take the exam again, i failed also.
9/2/05: Udo from Germany says: I think MS did a good thing to make the Certificaton so hard. To get the MCP is easy, but to get MCSA or MCSE is f****** hard. It's no longer possible only pass the exam with braindumps. You need to have also knowledge an experience. The hard way to get the certifaction make it very useful. I failed the 291 exam also, but on the next week i will do my second shot
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