FromanSFG wrote: » I took the test twice already and I am looking for some advise on how to get a better grasp of these questions so I can at least get thru the first pass in 3 maybe 4 hours. The last two times I did both exams in 5 hrs 30-40 mins. I need more time to go over these questions just in case I see something.
splash24 wrote: » It's a tricky question Everyone's grasp and way of answering questions is different. I passed CISSP 2 weeks back and some tips. Let me state that it is my own experience and no way advocating the same approach 1.Move over the scenario based questions - I did a glance and marked an answer but kept it for review because I knew I could do better once I get the sense of whole CISSP exam, This saved me 45 minutes initially 2.Same with ALE,SLE calculation questions. I was good at them so I did quick calculations. If I had to apply every scenario they were testing I would have taken a long long time which is what happened during the second pass but at least I knew all questions were answered and I took my own sweet time 3.Do not get hung up on questions you are not sure about , Eliminate atleast 2 answers and best guess the final one, Atleast you have a 50-50 chance 4.Do not try to solve a single issue , A question might pose you with Firewalls , ACL’s , Access controls , Encryption what not and finally the answer will be a statement which can potentially cover everything 5.While regulation questions are straight forward do know that they are not common and same across the world 6.Most of the time is taken to reread , reread and reread the questions multiple times , This is required but try to break it into parts like “Customer is not worried about Disclosure” you should eliminate any answer which has confidentiality in it although it makes the solution stronger. ( If you think technically any encryption helps but that’s not what the ISC2 is asking you , They want you to analyze the current problem and answer ) Last but not the least , There are some question you wonder whether it’s actually a question or solution is given and they want you to find the problem.I believe I would tag them under the research part ( 25 questions ) I am sure others have many more inouts , Hope this helps.
FromanSFG wrote: » Thank you for the detail overview. I'm going to try this when I go thru my practice questions again. What practice questions did you use?
splash24 wrote: » 5.While regulation questions are straight forward do know that they are not common and same across the world 6.Most of the time is taken to reread , reread and reread the questions multiple times , This is required but try to break it into parts like “Customer is not worried about Disclosure” you should eliminate any answer which has confidentiality in it although it makes the solution stronger. ( If you think technically any encryption helps but that’s not what the ISC2 is asking you , They want you to analyze the current problem and answer ) Last but not the least , There are some question you wonder whether it’s actually a question or solution is given and they want you to find the problem.I believe I would tag them under the research part ( 25 questions )