Charles,
Believe it or not but I see a great chance of success for the students
with failed written attempts on their lab exams! Why? Because you're
truly doing your best, taking the test and what you've got is exactly
what you ran for. Now you know your weaknesses "truly". Frankly, That's
why you see all those folks with the written 1000/1000 and stuck on
their 5th lab attempt. You're not going to be one of them.
Please don't feel discouraged; you're on the right track mate.
We do have a written workbook with heaps of questions - that may help;
you might wish to give it a shot but anyway you're now building your lab
foundation and not just wasting your time - not a problem.
HTH
--------------------------
Kambiz Agahian
CCIE (R&S), CCSI, WAASSE, RSSSE
Technical Instructor
CCBOOTCAMP - Cisco Learning Solutions Partner (CLSP)
Email: kagahian_at_ccbootcamp.com
Toll Free: 877-654-2243
International: +1-702-968-5100
Skype: skype:ccbootcamp?call
FAX: +1-702-446-8012
YES! We take Cisco Learning Credits!
Training And Remote Racks: http://www.ccbootcamp.com
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
John Lockie
Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 11:34 AM
To: Charles T. Alexander; ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Written Exam and troubleshooting
Another argument for doing lab prep only, and then taking the written
only
when you are ready for the lab (or feel ready) :-)
Regarding books, this probably depends on what you are looking to
troubleshoot!
On 5/25/10 11:20 AM, "Charles T. Alexander"
<charles.t.alexander_at_verizon.net> wrote:
> I failed the written exam. I have read all the usual books such as
Odom.
> The exam really has a lot more troubleshooing, or at least that is my
> take on it. Is there a good book(s) on this?
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
>
Received on Tue May 25 2010 - 11:50:27 ART
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Tue Jun 01 2010 - 07:09:53 ART