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It's sad how they base it off certs, since those have nothing to do on how good you can do the job, all certs do is show how good you are at memorizing stuff (which is probably all forgotten a week after the exam)
Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:4743, old post ID:37547
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Red Squirrel wrote: It's sad how they base it off certs, since those have nothing to do on how good you can do the job, all certs do is show how good you are at memorizing stuff (which is probably all forgotten a week after the exam)
I think they assume that a person going into the exam didn't just spend one long cram session memorizing the material. I think they would assume that the person knows the material thoroughly and that it's not just that the person has a good memory. That's one of the reasons I believe written exams serve no purpose. As my business teacher said "True or false questions don't show you understand the material. A monkey can fill in the test and pass". Whether it's true or false, MC or written chances are you'll forget all the material a few days after the exam is done.
Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:4743, old post ID:37548
In reference to the comment about memorization, I think that's why alot of certs in the industry have moved to simulation-based exams. Although this is some written or theoretical portion to it, there is also an element of hands on now present. Besides, let's say you were MSCA on NT4.... would you not want to brush up and recert on 2003 thus proving that you had the personal drive to quantify your skills and upgrade them?
Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:4743, old post ID:37557