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smiah wrote: » I have searched on internet and came across this site CISSP Exam Practice Questions and CISSP Example Tests which seems quite interesting, they have 5 demo questions to try and 3 of them did came to my exam. they were almost the same as in exam format.
SysAdmin4066 wrote: » Old exam questions are useful, as they give you the format of the actual questions you'll see.
JDMurray wrote: » The more practical InfoSec work experience you have the better you chances of passing the CISSP exam. The CISSP books by Shon Harris and the (ISC)2 are highly recommended. The free practice exam site run by cccure.org is www.freepracticetests.or. Make sure you read as many posts in the CISSP fourms at www.cccure.org that you can. Lots of great study information there. PrepLogic also has very good CISSP practice exams.
botbill wrote: » With your testing experience, what is the best way to retain the information from the book?
smiah wrote: » What is "OIGv2" (you can tell i'm new to this) please send possible link if it's an site?
JDMurray wrote: » Well, it's really no different than how you would retain information from reading any other book containing an intimidating amount of knowledge. If you find the information interesting, entertaining, and you can relate it to your real-world experience, you will remember it. This is why the more (and varied) professional InfoSec experience you have, the more likely you are to pass the CISSP exam. You will answer many of the CISSP exam items correctly because your professional experience guides you, and not because you've memorized a lot of rote facts from a book. I assume that you've already read my blog articles on studying for the CISSP exam?
VoxOrion wrote: » Three of us recently took ISC2 exams (one CISSP, two SSCP's) - two of us have results (pass), the other hasn't heard anything yet. We all agreed that none of the practice exams (books, electronic) we had access to came close, but two thirds of us know we passed so it probably didn't matter. My observations: 1. Practice exams are overly technical compared to the exam 2. Practice exams cover more material than you'll be tested on So what? On 1, you're being tested on the root of the knowledge - though you may not be asked (for example) to differentiate 802.11a from b and g, you may be asked a question that requires you to understand those differences, if you get what I'm saying. You need to drill that stuff, it doesn't matter that the exam won't ask many hard-core fill in the blank tech questions. On 2, this was very frustrating to us all, but you know what? That's life and ISC2 warns you - it's a wide deep pool of knowledge and you can't know which exam you are going to get. There were a number of areas where I spent considerable amounts of time studying material that didn't even come up on the exam - oh well. I still know it. That leaves the old "type of question" thing that everyone gets hung up about. I say blow that concern off, learn the material, and you'll be fine. I say use the practice exams, be able to pass them, but don't expect to see questions "like" (MS Certified professional speak for "exactly") the practice exams, or even similar. It is easier to say all of this after you've passed the exam, I respect that. This is just "our" two cents (I know my study partners agree).
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