VCP exam without course

mrx9000mrx9000 Member Posts: 37 ■■□□□□□□□□
I am gutted that VMware make you do their courses! I wont be spending $3000 to go on one in the UK, I could get a lot of crystal meth for $3000!! ;)

Do you guys think it would be stupid to sit the exam anyway - and put on CV/Resume:

VMWare VCP (exam only)
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Comments

  • TechnowizTechnowiz Member Posts: 211
    Can you even take the exam without having had the class?
  • slinuxuzerslinuxuzer Member Posts: 665 ■■■■□□□□□□
    No, you must take the course to be eligable for the exam.
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    You can take the exam whether or not you've taken the course. But there is no point as there is no such thing as "VMware VCP (exam only)" you are not in anyway a VCP unless you've met both requirements. That's like putting "MCSE (1 exam only)".

    VMware insists on the course since they will at least guarantee that you have at least 4 days of training in the product and you haven't just crammed a book or done a bunch of braindumps. Given the present state of IT certification I don't blame them. They don't want to see it become another MCSA/E.

    As a VCP myself (having paid out of pocket for a course just so I could get the certification) I can't really say I disagree with them.

    If you've been working with ESX for a few years skip the Install & Configure and take DSA (or FastTrack) - I guarantee you'll learn something... Most of my class had been working with ESX since 2.x and we all learned stuff.
  • HeroPsychoHeroPsycho Inactive Imported Users Posts: 1,940
    astorrs wrote:
    VMware insists on the course since they will at least guarantee that you have at least 4 days of training in the product and you haven't just crammed a book or done a bunch of braindumps. Given the present state of IT certification I don't blame them. They don't want to see it become another MCSA/E.

    As a VCP myself (having paid out of pocket for a course just so I could get the certification) I can't really say I disagree with them.

    I got to disagree with the above statements. You can sit the training, pass the exam, and still not be prepared to deploy or manage the product.

    The MCSE track for 2003 is more rigorous than the VCP track. IMO, it doesn't matter if you accumulate knowledge via classroom training, or reading books. As much as I like VMWare, I gotta say this is more of a ploy for money than it is keeping the cert legit. After self-studying for my MCSE 2000, which was admittedly easier than it should have been, I was far more prepared for deploying, designing, and managing Windows platforms than I was for VMWare Infrastructure after completing my VCP.
    Good luck to all!
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    Okay I'll give you that with the 2003 track Microsoft has done a much better job of screening out the paper certs - and I have no problem with self-study, thats how I've learned almost everything I know. And I'll admit the VCP exam was ridiculously easy.

    How would you suggest they handle things? I can't see a lab exam being cost effective for an entry-level (to VMware) cert like the VCP... what other method could they use? The VCDX exams will be way harder with a peer defense at the end but still requires at least 1 course (since it requires a VCP) and I don't agree with that.
  • HeroPsychoHeroPsycho Inactive Imported Users Posts: 1,940
    Personally, I don't think certs can ever be a definitive indication of skill. It represents some skill, knowledge, perhaps a bit of some type of intelligence, and a willingness to persevere and commit to completing a goal.

    They need to come up with a fair, challenging exam for VCP, and not require taking a class IMO. If you know the material for VCP, why does it need to come from a class. I could even see requiring a class for the VCDX cert, but not for VCP.
    Good luck to all!
  • mrx9000mrx9000 Member Posts: 37 ■■□□□□□□□□
    Ok, I agree, the VCP (exam only) is a little weak, I will give the exam a miss and will have to go with experience only :)

    If Microsoft can include practical simulations I am sure VMware could do 10 times better. I think they are mostly just cashing in... icon_sad.gif

    How do you rate the instructor that delivered your course? I have been on a few courses over the years and thought - "Phew, glad it was my employer that paid up for this course!"

    Somehow my expectations would be much higher if I was paying £1500 of my own money ;)
  • eMeSeMeS Member Posts: 1,875 ■■■■■■■■■□
    HeroPsycho wrote:
    Personally, I don't think certs can ever be a definitive indication of skill. It represents some skill, knowledge, perhaps a bit of some type of intelligence, and a willingness to persevere and commit to completing a goal.

    They need to come up with a fair, challenging exam for VCP, and not require taking a class IMO. If you know the material for VCP, why does it need to come from a class. I could even see requiring a class for the VCDX cert, but not for VCP.

    I agree with this, as I had a similar experience recently bridging my ITIL Manager's v2 certification to ITIL Expert v3.

    I was required to take a 4 day "bridging class" that was about $2500 and culminated in a test that bridged my certification to ITIL Expert v3. The test was extremely difficult, with a required score of 80% to pass. I was certain that I failed, but somehow I managed to score exactly 80%. I do know that at least half of the class failed (at least the honest half!).

    I knew as much about ITIL v3 as I was going to know going into the class. I had read the v3 ITIL books several times, which is about the only study material available. The class provided no additional information. Another bad thing is that I could have been working that week and earning money to support my wife's purse and shoe habit. Oddly enough, the a lack of money coming in during a given week doesn't seem to negatively impact the purse and shoe budget, whereas an increase in money coming in seems to permanently expand the budget. Someone should study this.....

    I agree that the origin of the knowledge is irrelevant. In fact, in this situation I would rather be charged $2500 for the right to take the test than have to pay $2500 to sit through a class that is providing nothing new or useful only to get to the test at the end. I'll make it up quickly in a single engagement, and if what I hear is true, a VCP will quickly recoup the $2995 they spend.

    IMO, VMware uses the cost of the class and exam prerequisites as a method of controlling supply and keeping the value of the VCP high. Additionally, as mentioned they are making some serious coin from it....

    MS
  • cacharocacharo Member Posts: 361
    astorrs wrote:
    You can take the exam whether or not you've taken the course. But there is no point as there is no such thing as "VMware VCP (exam only)" you are not in anyway a VCP unless you've met both requirements.

    That being said is it possible to do the exam before the class?

    It would likely take less time to self study and take the exam then it would be to twist the arm of my employer to send me to the class.

    Just curious...
    Treat people as if they were what they ought to be, and you help them become what they are capable of being.
  • eMeSeMeS Member Posts: 1,875 ■■■■■■■■■□
    cacharo wrote:
    astorrs wrote:
    You can take the exam whether or not you've taken the course. But there is no point as there is no such thing as "VMware VCP (exam only)" you are not in anyway a VCP unless you've met both requirements.

    That being said is it possible to do the exam before the class?

    It would likely take less time to self study and take the exam then it would be to twist the arm of my employer to send me to the class.

    Just curious...

    No, taking the class is a requirement.

    From their site:

    How to become a VMware Certified Professional

    Becoming a VMware Certified Professional is a straightforward, three-step process:

    1. Participate in a VMware authorized course that is instructor-led to learn best practices and gain hands-on experience. If you are a current VCP, there are no course prerequisites.

    2. Gain hands-on experience with VMware. Individuals who do not have the hands on experience find it very difficult to pass the exam.

    3. Enroll and pass the certification exam. To register to take the VMware Certified Professional examination please contact Pearson VUE, a third-party testing center at www.pearsonvue.com/vmware


    I'm assuming that when you register for the exam they have some type of training verification step. Can a current VCP confirm this?

    MS
  • HeroPsychoHeroPsycho Inactive Imported Users Posts: 1,940
    If memory serves me right, they only verify your course completion when you submit for consideration of obtaining the cert, not to take the exam.

    With that said, I don't at all understand why you would take the exam and the course later. The course can only help you pass, and most of the exam questions are straight out of the course book, so take the course and then take the exam.

    I would also encourage you to pay for the course out of pocket if your employer refuses to pay for you to go. $3000 sounds like a lot, but you will more than make the money up for that. A co-worker of mine just left the company because of his VMWare expertise for a job making $30K more than what he was making. $3K is peanuts!
    Good luck to all!
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    Warning: very long winded :)
    theloop wrote:
    How do you rate the instructor that delivered your course? I have been on a few courses over the years and thought - "Phew, glad it was my employer that paid up for this course!"

    It was without a doubt the best training class I have ever attended in my life. All the training I have ever taken has been out of my own pocket (independent consultant), so I tend to get pretty bitchy when it doesn't live up to my expectations.

    I have been working with virtualization since 2002 and VI3 for a couple of years so I am comfortable with all the basics, as such I didn't really want to fork out $3k to take Install & Configure, but they never offered DSA (Deploy, Secure & Analyze) here and I wanted to avoid traveling. Then I got lucky and the FastTrack "pilot" became a permanent course and they put a date for it in Vancouver.

    Since it was the first time VMware had ever offered an "advanced" course in Vancouver (it combines I&C plus DSA into 5x10hr days) only 2 of the students had limited knowledge of the product. The two instructors remarked it was the most advanced group of students they had ever had (I'm telling you this because if you ended up in a FastTrack with a bunch of beginners, I could foresee a different experience possibly).

    As for the course itself we were the first week of the "new revision" of the FastTrack course material where it was all nicely integrated (previously students had to flip between the I&C and DSA books and slidedecks - distracting to say the least). The material was well laid out and there was substantial detail. Because it was FastTrack we would spend about half a day on storage for example and cover everything from "what kind of storage does ESX support", to "how to modify the SCSI command queue depth for a QLogic fiber channel HBA via the service console CLI" (seriously!). Since we didn't really need to spend a lot of time on the basics we flew through it which allowed the instructors lots of time to address off the wall questions and best practices.

    You share an ESX host and VC server (via Citrix to their datacenter in California) with your neighbour, at first I was kind of hesitant about it (didn't I pay enough for my own server?) but I actually grew to like it - you could still do 75% of the labs on your own and for some of them it really helped having two people looking at the same thing (for command line stuff especially - typos are a P.I.T.A.).

    Which I guess brings us to the best part of the whole experience, the two instructors (there were two for FastTrack - you try teaching for 10 hours non-stop over 5 days!) were both VMware employees - not contractors - and had been teaching the material for ~3 years, as such they really knew there stuff (since they only teach VMware they focus all their practice/play time there - unlike contractors who often teach Microsoft or Cisco or whatever as well) and both had been instructors for 10-12 years (one had been in IT for 30 years - he started on IBM virtualization! :) ). I really felt their passion for the product and excellent depth of knowledge really made the course for me, if they were the course instructors I would say - yes take it - if its someone else try to make sure they're VMware Education staff instructors (my instructors were Mark Fei and Andrew Ellwood and although it was their first time teaching together they made an awesome team).

    And again if you have lots of previous VMware experience take FastTrack or DSA. I learned some stuff in FastTrack I found really valuable that I would have otherwise missed with only DSA - but its pricey.

    No for the oh so important question... ROI.

    FastTrack course = $5495
    VCP-310 exam = Included
    Total = $5495 USD

    As an employee at your current job will it get you a $6k raise - maybe, but probably not.
    Will it help you get a better paying job? Most likely, a quick monster scan shows it on a dozen openings in Vancouver right now.

    As for me its already paid for itself in new consulting offers.

    Sorry for the long winded rant. Hope some of it made sense. :)
  • jibbajabbajibbajabba Member Posts: 4,317 ■■■■■■■■□□
    I did both vmware classes and passed also the VCP 3.5 exam. But I must say that the requirement of being on a course is a good thing.

    I passed several MCPs and for a bet I even passed a Microsoft exam without having an idea about the content (ISA server) - never touched ISA etc. and passed just using braindumps / transcender etc. As I said - this was for a bet and as a proof of concept that Microsoft exams are mostly paper exams.

    As VCP you know you had SOME handson experience, even if it just for a couple of days in a class, but you have at least installed and configured a cluster ONCE ... I didn't even install ISA once ... so go figure.

    And : The course and course book is not even close to enough to pass the exam. A lot of questions can only be answered when you have enough experience ..

    So comparing Microsoft and VMware exams is a bit dodgy

    And yes, you can take the exam without the course .. I know a few people who did it because they couldn't afford the course but wanted to have the exam as long as they knew the stuff .. All they have to do now is the course and they get their offical welcome package ..
    My own knowledge base made public: http://open902.com :p
  • AEVAEV Member Posts: 9 ■□□□□□□□□□
    You mean the test is included with the fast-track course????? Holy=poo Batman!! I'm taking the fast-track next month and almost scheduled the test after the class.... I guess I'll have to verify that info..

    Also years (YEARS) ago my company needed 2 MCSE to hold their Microsoft ranking so I did SMS1.0 so I could finish MCSE3.51 and wouldn't you know it... Without even seeing it I found myself setting it up at 130+ offices. Talking about falling into the fire. Well everything turned out fine and SMS is still around and did I ever learn my lesson... "If you don't use it, Don't go for the exam" Because maybe, just maybe your employer will **** something on you. icon_eek.gif
  • tierstentiersten Member Posts: 4,505
    AEV wrote:
    You mean the test is included with the fast-track course????? Holy=poo Batman!! I'm taking the fast-track next month and almost scheduled the test after the class.... I guess I'll have to verify that info..
    I think its the old V3 fast track that included the exam voucher. The latest revision of the course doesn't seem to have it. At least when I did it last month I didn't get one and the spec sheets from VMware don't mention it any more.
  • jibbajabbajibbajabba Member Posts: 4,317 ■■■■■■■■□□
    tiersten wrote:
    AEV wrote:
    You mean the test is included with the fast-track course????? Holy=poo Batman!! I'm taking the fast-track next month and almost scheduled the test after the class.... I guess I'll have to verify that info..
    I think its the old V3 fast track that included the exam voucher. The latest revision of the course doesn't seem to have it. At least when I did it last month I didn't get one and the spec sheets from VMware don't mention it any more.

    The voucher is only included in fast track courses held by vmware itself, not neccessarily in courses held by ie IBM
    My own knowledge base made public: http://open902.com :p
  • MishraMishra Member Posts: 2,468 ■■■■□□□□□□
    Gomjaba wrote:
    I did both vmware classes and passed also the VCP 3.5 exam. But I must say that the requirement of being on a course is a good thing.

    I passed several MCPs and for a bet I even passed a Microsoft exam without having an idea about the content (ISA server) - never touched ISA etc. and passed just using braindumps / transcender etc. As I said - this was for a bet and as a proof of concept that Microsoft exams are mostly paper exams.

    As VCP you know you had SOME handson experience, even if it just for a couple of days in a class, but you have at least installed and configured a cluster ONCE ... I didn't even install ISA once ... so go figure.

    And : The course and course book is not even close to enough to pass the exam. A lot of questions can only be answered when you have enough experience ..

    So comparing Microsoft and VMware exams is a bit dodgy

    And yes, you can take the exam without the course .. I know a few people who did it because they couldn't afford the course but wanted to have the exam as long as they knew the stuff .. All they have to do now is the course and they get their offical welcome package ..

    Yeah man those MS exams are dumb because you can just **** them. Thats what I did too.

    I went and got my degree to become a doctor and just cheated all though that too. I ended up killing a few people through surgery's and everyone sued me until I was bankrupt. But thats okay because its ez ez pie.
    My blog http://www.calegp.com

    You may learn something!
  • HeroPsychoHeroPsycho Inactive Imported Users Posts: 1,940
    Gomjaba wrote:
    I did both vmware classes and passed also the VCP 3.5 exam. But I must say that the requirement of being on a course is a good thing.

    I passed several MCPs and for a bet I even passed a Microsoft exam without having an idea about the content (ISA server) - never touched ISA etc. and passed just using braindumps / transcender etc. As I said - this was for a bet and as a proof of concept that Microsoft exams are mostly paper exams.

    As VCP you know you had SOME handson experience, even if it just for a couple of days in a class, but you have at least installed and configured a cluster ONCE ... I didn't even install ISA once ... so go figure.

    And : The course and course book is not even close to enough to pass the exam. A lot of questions can only be answered when you have enough experience ..

    So comparing Microsoft and VMware exams is a bit dodgy

    And yes, you can take the exam without the course .. I know a few people who did it because they couldn't afford the course but wanted to have the exam as long as they knew the stuff .. All they have to do now is the course and they get their offical welcome package ..

    I know a guy who attended the VMWare training, didn't pay attention and/or didn't understand, used brain **** to pass the exam, and he's a clueless VCP.

    I challenge you to tell me what's different between him and you passing an ISA exam aside from VMWare making $3000 on training.

    I know plenty of people who attended formal training for MCSE, and I didn't, and I knew the material better than they did.

    In my opinion, a requirement to attend training doesn't mean you know the material any better.
    Good luck to all!
  • tierstentiersten Member Posts: 4,505
    Gomjaba wrote:
    tiersten wrote:
    AEV wrote:
    You mean the test is included with the fast-track course????? Holy=poo Batman!! I'm taking the fast-track next month and almost scheduled the test after the class.... I guess I'll have to verify that info..
    I think its the old V3 fast track that included the exam voucher. The latest revision of the course doesn't seem to have it. At least when I did it last month I didn't get one and the spec sheets from VMware don't mention it any more.

    The voucher is only included in fast track courses held by vmware itself, not neccessarily in courses held by ie IBM
    Ah. Mine was from a partner. The ones held by VMware themselves don't list the voucher either however.
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    When I took mine back in late April/early May through VMware it still included the voucher.

    Here is a quote from the VMware certification FAQ:
    What do I need to know about the Fast Track class?
    ...all students of the class will receive vouchers for the VCP test at the completion of the Fast Track class...
  • tierstentiersten Member Posts: 4,505
    astorrs wrote:
    When I took mine back in late April/early May through VMware it still included the voucher.

    Here is a quote from the VMware certification FAQ:
    What do I need to know about the Fast Track class?
    ...all students of the class will receive vouchers for the VCP test at the completion of the Fast Track class...
    The FAQ still mentions VI3 as the latest so doesn't look like its been updated. The PDF course descriptions had a voucher mentioned in the VI3 version but that line disappeared in VI3.5 version.

    Either way, mine was via a partner so it wouldn't have come with a voucher. They didn't mention that a partner course doesn't come with the free voucher. We managed to get the course at a discount anyway so course + paid exam was still significantly cheaper than the regular price.
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    tiersten wrote:
    Either way, mine was via a partner so it wouldn't have come with a voucher. They didn't mention that a partner course doesn't come with the free voucher. We managed to get the course at a discount anyway so course + paid exam was still significantly cheaper than the regular price.
    Fair enough. Did you use the new Revision B course materials? (the combined course) or did you have to "flip"
  • tierstentiersten Member Posts: 4,505
    Flip. Had 3 books in total. I&C, DSA and the combined lab book. The instructor jumped around like crazy in the books because certain parts were better in the other book apparently.
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    That's too bad. The second revision ("VI3 Fast Track 3.5 Revision B") course materials are so much easier to work with. I wonder if only the official courses are using it.

    For anyone considering taking the course in the future with HP or IBM, you should ask which materials you will be using.
  • tierstentiersten Member Posts: 4,505
    astorrs wrote:
    That's too bad. The second revision ("VI3 Fast Track 3.5 Revision B") course materials are so much easier to work with. I wonder if only the official courses are using it.

    For anyone considering taking the course in the future with HP or IBM, you should ask which materials you will be using.
    Yeah. Having it all combined would have been nice. The jumping between books used up quite a bit of time and was a bit confusing in places. No idea if I was just right before they rolled out rev B or whether it was only for VMware run courses at the time.

    It wasn't with HP or IBM. It was run by a third party training company but still listed on the VMware website. All the non VMware courses have Contact Partner next to them.
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    All the VMware run courses were supposed to switch over as of the April 28th course I took - it was the first "new" course, and the instructors loved it (one of them had been heavily involved in its development) - but of course there were still a few problems :).
  • mrx9000mrx9000 Member Posts: 37 ■■□□□□□□□□
    With no conceivable option to ever attend a VM course (damn global credit crunch). I am still tempted to take the exams... Not to ever deceptively suggest VCP status but just to demonstrate some level of VM competence in addition to hands on experience.

    Qualifications:
    Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator
    VMware VCP-310 Exam
    Higher National Diploma IT
    100M Swimming Badge
    Boy Scouts Fire Lighting and Camping Badge

    What do you think?
  • dynamikdynamik Banned Posts: 12,312 ■■■■■■■■■□
    Fire Lighting and Camping clearly overshadows everything else icon_lol.gif

    I guess I don't see the value in it. You're not allowed to say that you're VCP unless you take the course, and people aren't going to be combing resumes for the exam number. You can list it as a qualification/skill without taking the exam. Just state what your experience with it is.

    Also, I hear a lot of the text content comes from the course materials, so it may be a bit difficult with self-study. I'll let you know in a few weeks ;)
  • astorrsastorrs Member Posts: 3,139 ■■■■■■□□□□
    dynamik wrote:
    Also, I hear a lot of the text content comes from the course materials, so it may be a bit difficult with self-study. I'll let you know in a few weeks ;)
    Yes the exam comes directly from the I&C course manual. You could study without it but the manual is very well written and could be used as your only study method (along with the labs in the course and a little hands on).
  • mrx9000mrx9000 Member Posts: 37 ■■□□□□□□□□
    I started out with 12 hours of CBT Nugget video training, which I highly recommend. Of course I could not say if it was detailed enough for the exam - I would not have thought so...
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