djm11 wrote: » Yeah, ucertify. I was scoring quite well on those practices, I did all of them. The real exam was quite different and now I dont really feel like they helped much at all. I think now I might skip to 642 and 646. I'll come back to 640 later...
Jander1023 wrote: » Did you use any practice questions? I use the 30 day online access at Kaplan and the 30 day online access at Measure up. The questions are not an exact match to what's on the exams but the style of the questions is similar! It really helps. The practice questions also help me identify my weaker areas and I can spend some time reviewing the specific topics. Not just for my sake but maybe another person will read this thread and gain something from it!
djm11 wrote: » Another whinge thread? Maybe... In March I decided to head down the MCITP route, and last week I took 640 and failed with 679. I was surprised to find so many questions that didnt seem to be related to the study I undertook and also memorisation questions (command line switches etc). I used CBT nuggets and ucertify exams along with sites like technet and I had a 2008 box to poke around on. After reading about the exam updates to R2 (which obviously none of my study aids were) I looked deeper into this, and further into command switches. Today I took the exam again and somehow managed to score 638 and the transcript showed my weaknesses were in my strong areas from the last exam?! It was also very strange that I was asked questions about W2K3 boxes running in a W2K domain - this is a 2008 exam! Its the first time I've been to this place and I took both exams there, but I'm becoming sceptical of the scoring systems now especially because they keep it so secretive. Have there previously been any issues with the exam systems? My computer also crashed while I took the exam. Its the first MS exam I've had any trouble with...
LCA wrote: » I've also found in MCITP level exams like 647 for the 4 answers to be in some way correct so the candidate has to pick the "Microsoft" correct answer which isn't always what is real world best practice.