From: CCIE3000 (ccie3000@googlemail.com)
Date: Thu Aug 14 2008 - 11:46:25 ART
Jason,
There isn't much more you are going to learn in the last week, just skim
read your notes.
As for the exam, you know the score. Good nights sleep.
Read whole exam from begining to end before touching the keyboard.
Make some notes as you go through on points that could interfere with other
sections.
When you start, read the question with your finger, every word, don't rush
it, you will only save seconds rushing through reading the question.
Do the task and then go back and re-read the question, take another 45
seconds but you just double check that you covered all the points and didn't
miss anything.
On 8/14/08, Morris, Jason L. <Jasmorris@checkngo.com> wrote:
>
> Ok, I'm sure this is an out there question since no one REALLY knows my
> strengths and weaknesses but I'm starten to freak out so I have to
> ask...
>
>
>
> I'm scheduled for the lab in a week and I'm not sure how I spend that
> last week before the test. I've spent the past week going over
> multicast and IPv6 which I think I was shaky on. I think I'm alright
> with the core stuff, I'm sure they'll throw some things at me I haven't
> see but I usually don't have trouble finding things on a the DocCD
> unless I'm just completely off base and looking in the wrong area. I'm
> finding most of the time when I get something wrong on a practice/mock
> lab it's because I'm misunderstanding/misinterpreting the question.
> I've taken both Assessors, I took B first and only got 46%, after crying
> for an hour and reviewing the report there were a few grading script
> problems, but most of it was 'a topic I've had problems with' and
> misreading the questions (I'm good with that topic now BTW). The second
> one Assessor A, there were again some grading problems but after those I
> did much better than the first time around and got ~72
>
>
>
> I feel like I also have a problem review my own work, when I do I'm
> basically just verifying that I configured what I thought was right the
> first time. I think I need to be able to read the question the second
> time around 'with new eyes' if get what I'm saying.
>
>
>
> So that's kind of where I'm at... any thoughts? Am I answering my own
> question and not seeing it?
>
> Jason Morris
>
>
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>
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