From: Scott Morris (smorris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Apr 03 2001 - 22:23:49 GMT-3
Methodology is very subjective.... What works for one person may not work
for another simply because it's a THOUGHT PROCESS... Some of us are getting
older, and our minds work one way, and one way only. :)
I would suggest coming up with your process before the lab.... Everyone
knows what components there are to think about, as you laid out below. But
each persons' approach will be more akin to the way their mind works. I
don't think my mind works at all sometimes, but I at least did read the test
(twice) before getting started. That way I could plan my attack... I did
cabling before documentation, but that's just me.
Best of luck regardless!
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Jerry Hutcheson
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2001 9:12 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Speed in the LAB
I was talking to someone who recently passed on his third try and he said
that he was able to greatly increase his speed, by changing his approach to
the exam.
He said that first he just reads the entire test very carefully (logical).
Then he lays out his entire drawing with all of the details.
Then he does his cabeling.
Finally he does his router configuration. But instead of configuring
different steps, he configures each router completely, before moving on to
the next router. I wonder if anyone has any comments on this, does anyone
use this method, has it worked?
Jerry
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