RE: Now its my turn

From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Fri Apr 21 2006 - 09:09:48 GMT-3


Excellent!!! Enjoy being re-acquainted with the family!!! Congratulations!

 
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713, JNCIE
#153, CISSP, et al.
CCSI/JNCI
IPExpert CCIE Program Manager
IPExpert Sr. Technical Instructor
smorris@ipexpert.com
http://www.ipexpert.com
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Larry Roberts
Sent: Friday, April 21, 2006 8:01 AM
To: 'CCIE Security Mailing List'; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Now its my turn

Well, finally I get my chance to write this e-mail. On the 19th of April I
officially became CCIE 16084. (Security)

Its been a long road for me and I have paid the light bills more that once
or twice for Cisco.

First time was 4 or so years ago. I wasn't ready, but I didn't have a clue
how to study for the lab. At this point I had never even heard of groupstudy
and I don't think anyone even offered a workbook at this point. I failed,
but it was semi-respectable.

Fast forward another year and its time again. This time I think that I'm
prepared. and I go in and give it a good shot. Turns out I wasn't. I had a
couple questions that I didn't understand what they were wanting.

Fast forward another year. I know I'm ready at this point. I have subscribed
to groupstudy and really started digging into the material.
I take the lab and I'm sure I nailed it. I get my results and its my poorest
showing yet. I finished early, reviewed my work and still failed. At this
point its no longer material thats getting me, but rather the questions.

Fast forward 2 months. My written is about to expire and I need to get this
thing done. The format has changed and now the lab is pre-configured. R&S
points were gimme points so now I'm a little nervous. I go in and nail the
lab. I'm convinced I pass. I almost celebrate. Then I get the result...Fail.
In my lab the IDS sensor wouldn't save the config. I get my results back and
I get 0 for the IDS stuff. If I calculated correctly I was within 3-4 points
of passing and the IDS stuff killed me. I was smart enough to ask the
proctors to grade me IDS stuff before they do any work on it, so either they
didn't or I missed something. Who knows.

Fast forward 1 year and 3 months to April 19th 2006. I have been working at
Cisco since last August. Its baptism by fire! When I started working at
Cisco I decided then and there that this certification was mine. What I
needed was a new approach. My last two attempts I had failed not because of
a lack of knowledge, but because I didn't get what they were asking for or I
didn't give them *EXACTLY* what they asked. I finally broke down and
purchased a workbook and decided to get some training.
With my IPExpert workbook in hand I sat down and started going over each
section. At the end I would look and compare my answers to what they had.
Each line was analysed to see why they used the commands they did.

For me, the workbook made the difference. Yes there were errors, but being
able to find those and even better, be able to tell you WHY they were wrong
is what told me that I was ready. I know that Wayne is updating the material
now and that those books will be even better.
They really do make the difference...

What I'm trying to say is DONT EVER GIVE UP. It took me 5 times to get it,
but nowhere on my number does it mention how many times I took it to pass,
only that I passed! Its also more than knowing the material. You need to
read the question and analyse every word. When I was going back over the
test to review I found words that would alter something I did.
If I hadn't done that I wouldn't have passed. And finally BUG THE CRAP out
of the proctor. Its what he is there for.
I seeked clarification or definition at least 15 times. I wasn't going to
fail because I didn't understand what they were asking for.

Last but not least I want to thank my loving wife and my now 7 month old
daughter for showing the patience to let me get this out of my system. I
promise to no longer be "the man that lives in the basement".

Larry Roberts CCIE 16084



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