Friday, May 02, 2008

10 CCIE LAB TIPS

  1. Read the entire exam – now I know everyone is saying that and even Cisco it advising that in there site, but this is one of the important things you need to do before you start configuring as when you start configuring, your mind is set to different mode and you will miss important details.
  2. Take Notes - In addition to step 1 you must know to take notes, what I mean you ask yourself?! Well when you read the exam you will probably be thinking "am I wasting my time reading when other are typing and almost finishing their exam" I say NO you are not but because you all stress and your brain is speeding in almost 200mph you will not remember if you will not take notes.
  3. Work Your Way UP – After first two steps are done you are probably 30 min – 40 min into your exam do not panic, work in a step by step layer 2 to layer 3…
  4. Ask The Proctor – there was in my lab a real nice person that I am sorry I didn't ask for his name but for me his name was Mr. Proctor and whenever I had a question about something that I didn't understand or I thought that it is not well asked then I got up from my seat and went to his desk and ASKED, no shame, If you do not understand ASK that is one of his jobs, Accept for escorting you to the dining room J
  5. Don't ASK Dumb Questions – The Proctor will not give you an answer to your lab question, he will only answer "yes" or "no" format and only if he understand from your question that you know what you are talking about, so do not go and ask "question 1.1 what do you want me to do here" (In CCIE Routing and Switching Practice Labs, Cisco Press book you can see a lot of questions / Answers like that).
  6. Be Polite – the proctor doesn't work for you so be nice, that is the end of proctor candidate relation advice.
  7. You Can Jump Back and FWD – the exam is open to your judgment you can say I will do first security then multicast or I will do IPv6 last
  8. Keep Track – the exam have a lot of questions and sections, you need to write down questions and/or sections you finished, I myself written every question and its points, when done I have marked with "ok" when skipped marked with "later" when I have finished I looked on my paper and made sure I didn't left any question without "ok"
  9. Know How to check – after every question I did a check to make sure that what they want to work dose work, it is not always sufficient to put the commands as some time one section is relaying on another and putting the command relating to that question will not work until you add or remove other commands, I hope that is not to confusing, but most of the exam time went in my exam to verification. Also once you go to sections like security that may brake other sections, I would go back and verify the sections all over again and if they don't work I know where is the problem, if I didn't check every step it would be hard and more stressful when something would not work at the end.
  10. Do not panic – that is important and for some it is more for other it is less, when you see the exam for the first time do not panic take it and brake it to small pieces, and do it one step at a time, if you face a problem skip ahead do not try to solve it for 2hr you can come back to it later

GOOD LUCK

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks

chukabume said...

excellent post. you said in step 2 to take notes when reading the exam, can you please elaborate more on that? what type of notes and what were the things you were writing down when going throught the paper?

cciep3 said...

Thank you, notes can be key points that you read from your lab paper meaning you can write a todo list (I cant elaborate on that as the NDA restrict me) or diagram do your own diagram to understand better the topology.