The percentage who go from fail to pass is small, but it does happen.
If you feel this strongly about it, and can word it in a nice,
professional-sounding detailed case then I would think it worthwhile to
request a re-read.
The good news is that if you DO pass on the re-read, they do not charge
you the extra fee! :)
Good luck!
*Scott Morris*, CCIE/x4/ (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713,
CCDE #2009::D, CCNP-Voice, JNCIE-SP #153, JNCIE-ER #102, CISSP, et al.
CCSI #21903, JNCI-SP, JNCI-ER
swm_at_emanon.com
Knowledge is power.
Power corrupts.
Study hard and be Eeeeviiiil......
On 8/30/11 8:22 PM, Josiah Chonko wrote:
> I took the CCIE R&S in San Jose on Monday and walked out knowing that
> I had passed. During the TS section I completed all tickets and
> verified them 100% with 30 minutes to spare. I spent this 30 minutes
> double, triple checking every part of every ticket, reviewing the
> rules and restrictions to verify I did not violate anything. Come to
> find out, I failed the troubleshooting section and passed the
> configuration. I could not believe that I failed the troubleshooting
> and it took me some time to figure out why I failed but I believe it
> was because of misinformation from the proctor. I had asked the
> proctor a question regarding one of the tickets which I believe he
> gave me the wrong information on. Due to NDA I can not tell you what
> the ticket was or what the misinformation he gave me was. It was
> simple clarification question on what the end result of a question
> should be. It had nothing to do with my technical knowledge but
> interpretation of the question. Our conversation is below:
>
> Me: "Is the question asking me to do A or B?"
> Proctor: "Can you make B happen?"
> Me: "Yes"
> Proctor: "Then do that"
>
> Looking back on that conversation and the ticket itself, I realized
> that he gave me the wrong information. I was supposed to do it the
> other way which is why I missed that question. If I had done it the
> other way, I would have received credit for that ticket and therefore
> would have passed the exam. He seemed to be a little unsure himself
> about whether I should do it one way or another. If he had graded the
> lab himself, I believe he would have gave me credit for it since he
> told me to do it that way.
>
> So my question is: Should I request a reread or just reschedule for
> another attempt? Has anyone done a reread and is this the type of
> thing that would take a grade from FAIL to PASS? I noticed on the
> page that when you request a reread, they provide you with a place for
> comments where I could describe, in detail, this same scenario and
> hope that they would talk to my proctor who could confirm our
> conversation.
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> Subscription information may be found at:
> http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Tue Aug 30 2011 - 20:59:14 ART
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Thu Sep 01 2011 - 06:05:56 ART