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Alex90 wrote: » I would say one of the best things you could do is book the exam now! I've found that since booking the exam and having a goal/timeline to stick to has forced me to study. And at the end of the day, even if I don't pass first time I think I'll still be most of the way to achieving my goal.
thatguy67 wrote: » YMMV with this approach. I thought that would be a good approach for me but I ended up getting stressed out a couple days before, and started rushing as the test got closer and closer. I found that it adds an element of stress when the clock is ticking down. For my retake, I am going to make sure I've mastered the material, then schedule the exam 24-48 hours in advance when everything is contextually good (I've been exercising, eating right, sleeping plenty, basically no psychological setbacks).
Alex90 wrote: » Yea I understand what you mean. I gave myself a decent time frame, I'd already been studying on/off for a while so decided to book my exam 2 months in advance. Time will tell whether this approach works for me because I have my exam at the end of this month. I've certainly found that my study rate has increased to fit in as much as I can before the big day. One thing that I want to do going forward, is to set a goal of having the exam done within a certain time. For example next year I aim to do CCNP, CCNA Voice and DC (6 months CCNP, 2 months for CCNA Voice and 4 months for CCNA DC). Some people have said it's a bit unrealistic/optimistic but im my opinion if someone can study their butt off for a year and pass CCIE, then there is no reason that I can't pass these exams within this time frame if I study equally as hard! I'm studying about 30 hours per week a the moment and have been for the last couple of months, if I can keep this up then I think I can do it! I've gone a bit off topic but anyway, booking the exam and setting a time frame seems to work for me but I guess it doesn't work for everyone.
Cyberscum wrote: » I have decided to start my CCNA journey. I hope to finish in two months and have broken it down to this: -CBT nuggets/packet tracer and sim lab of 2 routers and 3 switches (have not bought yet.) About 3 hours a day of bookwork About 6-10 hours a week of labbing Is 2 months possible with CISSP understanding of networking?
stlsmoore wrote: » Yup taking my last exam (TSHOOT) in an hour, hopefully I can squeeze out a pass. ROUTE took me a solid 5-6 months but I was only studying 1-2 hours a day. SWITCH was 2-3 months, and TSHOOT I spent 2 months but everyone says to just take it 2 weeks after SWITCH. Guess we'll see about that one here shortly. No more voice exams for me if I can help it lol. I'm fine with administrating and troubleshooting the majority of VoIP requests that land my way. I'm even comfortable with implementing smaller scale VoIP projects as well. However I'll leave the rest to the big dogs like Shodown on here. Unified Communications is a really fast moving target in my opinion due to how quickly the technology changes in that arena and I just can't keep up with it.
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