Bryan,

My last words in this so we can continue with the LPIC-3 exam objectives.

We all know the good and bad things of hands on vs. form based exams,
what we need is together list and analyze these points and vote or
something else to decide if it is worthy or not.

One more thing I think about hands on exams is that it doesn't look
only for the candidate technical skills. Candidate have to know how to
use his time to complete all the tasks and in order, because if the
first fails maybe all other fails. He has time and stress to complete
the exam, appears like the real world which your boss is there asking
things for "yesterday".

You have something like that in paper based exams too, but not in the
same proportion I think.

[]'s
Felipe

On 6/14/06, Bryan J. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 02:21 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> Mark Miller raises an interesting point in this regard a year ago, I
> wish I still had the mail to cite the source. The gist of it is that
> there is a statistical trend with hands-on where the results are
> affected by the candidates mood (nervous, freak out in exams) whereas
> it is largely absent with multiple choice.

No joke!

I got to directly observe 12 other candidates at my RHCE lab exam.  11
were in the crash course for the week, 1 other guy had failed the week
prior so he was retaking the exam-only.  I was just there for the
exam-only, cold turkey.

One gentleman was sweating bullets, literally!  He was dripping globs!
Totally drenched by the end of the first session.

Several other people were noticeably lost.  Especially the first part of
the test where you have to get a _perfect_ 100%.  In all honesty, I had
less experience with that portion (I used an alternative solution), but
I figured it out rather quickly.

> A major disadvantage of hands-on is that questions usually follow on
> from each other - you can only add new users if you perform the
> install right. making a mistake in the first step affects the rest of
> the scores, which it shouldn't as failing one step should affect only
> the score for THAT step

Sometimes the hands-on tests can really "paint you in a corner" if you
don't have enough experience with something.  I will never take the RHCE
exam-only again (I got a 96% and passed, but as little as a 93% and you
can still fail because of some sub-section compulsory requirement), you
really need the crash-course.

But if I need the crash-course, then what does that say for the exam?


--
Bryan J. Smith           Professional, technical annoyance
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]     http://thebs413.blogspot.com
----------------------------------------------------------
The existence of Linux has far more to do with the breakup
of AT&T's monopoly than anything Microsoft has ever done.


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