From: Peter Chuba (ptchuba@live.com)
Date: Sun Feb 15 2009 - 09:17:18 ARST
This is getting scarier. If that's how the minimum score works, then it's
really unfair considering that some get 4 questions while others get 5. I
see no way that a minimum score can be set for each group without favouring
one side.
Additionally if this open-ended questions have that weighting of 21 then
they might as well tell me immediately after completing the section if I've
failed or not so I can go home and forget about the $1750 I paid for my
mobile lab. $1750 gone in 10 minutes.wow!
IF this is how Cisco grades the exam, then I think they have failed in their
attempt to filter out braindumpers, because they will really be filtering
out good engineers. The access-list is just too broad.
Peter
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Darby Weaver
Sent: Sunday, February 15, 2009 7:53 AM
To: Cisco certification
Subject: Open-Ended Lab Questions - All or Nothing?
Taken from CCIEPursuit's Blog
=================================================
Open-Ended Question Grading: All or Nothing
Filed under: Cisco, Cisco Certification cciepursuit @ 3:28 pm
Tags: CCIE, CCIE Lab, Certification, Cisco, Cisco Certification
In a discussion on the Cisco Networking Professionals Connection a candidate
recently failed his lab. He received a 0% grade on the new "open-ended
question" portion of the lab even though he was sure that he got at least 2
of the 4 questions correct. If he got two of the four questions correct then
he should have received a 50% mark in that category, right? Well, it turns
out that this is NOT the case:
Replied by: lohaver - Marketing Programs Manager, CISCO SYSTEMS - Feb 10,
2009, 4:30pm PST
Hello Nuno,
I work on the CCIE team. The short answer section is graded on an "all or
nothing" basis. If you answer the minimum number correct you will get 100%.
If you don't achieve the minimum, your score shows as 0%. It is indeed
possible that you answered two questions correctly.
Lora O'Haver
Learning @Cisco
What the [censored]??? Honestly, WHAT THE [censored]?!?!? What is the
"minimum number correct"? I would have to assume that in this case it's
three. Lora states that he could have correctly answered two and still not
passed the section. If it were four then she would (well, 'should') have
said that you need to answer all of the questions correctly. This "minimum
number" gets more interesting in that some candidates have received 4
questions while others have received 5 questions.
This gets even more interesting. From the responses on this thread it looks
like the questions are worth a total of 21 points and the remainder of the
lab is worth 79 points. That means that you need to pass the question
portion of the lab in order to pass the entire lab as the passing grade is
80 points and the most that you can score on the lab portion is 79 points.
I've fully supported the addition of the questions to the lab, but this new
scoring "revelation" pisses me off. IF the questions are worth 21 points
towards your total score and they are graded on an "all or nothing" method
based on meeting some undisclosed "minimum number of correct responses" then
this is more than just a minor addition to the lab and Cisco really owes it
to the candidates forking over $1400 to explain this better. This "all or
nothing" scoring is especially important for candidates to be aware of
because if they aren't aware of it, then they may be likely to request a
reread of their exam. If you get a 0% on a section that you are sure that
you had at least half of the questions correct, then you're most likely
going to assume that the lab was graded incorrectly and request a reread
($250).
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
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