From: Petr Lapukhov (petrsoft@gmail.com)
Date: Sat May 06 2006 - 03:28:18 ART
Roberto,
There some big problems with real lab:
1) It's a huge STRESS. If you are not comfortable working under heavy
pressure,
you'd better practice. Things you may find simple with your everyday
practice
may suddenly become hard at real lab. Just because you're nervous.
2) You must manage your TIME well. Carefully plan and implement. Don't
waste even a single minute. You'll need quite some time for verification.
3) You really need to communicate well with PROCTOR. You must
clarify EVERY topic you find vague. You should do what they want you to do.
So use all your communication skills here :)
4) VERIFICATION. Most probably you'll occasionally make mistakes with your
lab configuration. So verify every single bit you typed :) More then that,
verify
it twice :)
HTH
Petr
2006/5/5, Roberto Fernandez <rofernandez@us.telefonica.com>:
>
> Friends,
>
> Yesterday I failed at my second try. Even when I'm sure I was far better
> prepared than at my first try, my score was poorer. Now I'm trying to re
> think the whole thing, trying to find what to do to improve my chances
> for the next time.
>
> The Workbook (one of the majors) I used to prepare, definitely gave me
> solid knowledge on the technologies, which I use every day on my job,
> but the tests proved to be a different thing. The labs on the Workbook
> are structured and logic, but the lab tests are different.
>
> In terms of rounding up my knowledge and experience I'd like to have
> some inputs based on the experience of the ones who have succeeded. What
> is the missing link, (or whole chain for that matter...)
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Roberto
>
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