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Senior Writer Jon Brodkin discusses IT career and education trends and issues.
At the beginning of this year, Cisco launched the written test for its Cisco Certified Design Expert (CCDE) program, which lets IT pros demonstrate expertise in network infrastructure design principles and fundamental concepts.
The missing piece – until now – was the practical exam. How would Cisco create a test to objectively measure network design, which some would argue is far from being an exact science?
Cisco Subnet blogger Michael Morris, who is one of the exam’s beta testers, offered a sneak peek to Network World readers on June 19, showing screen shots of the computer-based exam that’s written in Adobe Flash. Cisco then gave me a preview over the phone, acknowledging that the exam is a departure from the vendor’s typical lab-based exams, but expressing confidence in the cert's ability to assess design skills.
“Some people say design is subjective,” says David Bump, portfolio manager of Cisco Learning's design track. “But the way these questions are built, there’s only one right answer.”
The test, which is entering beta and will be ready in October, lasts eight hours and is divided into four two-hour sections, each of which uses a hypothetical business scenario and requires test-takers to answer questions based on a set of business requirements. In one scenario, a business is involved in a merger and acquisition.
The test candidate receives documentation from IT management, points of contact, a series of e-mails between the companies, compliance requirements, and other information.
The main requirement in one scenario might be 24/7 availability, and in another it could be high security.
“There is more than one way to build a network, but from a business requirements standpoint, if you look at what the business
needs, there is a best way,” Bump says.
Bump says Cisco had “the best guys in the industry” create the test.
“These are guys who do this every day,” he says. “Yeah, design is subjective, but if you talk to these guys, you’ll understand there’s a right way and a wrong way to do design analysis.”
The test is mostly multiple choice, with some questions using “drag-and-drop” functionality, Morris says.
“I think generally they’ve come up with a great concept here,” Morris says. “It’s really hard to come up with a test on this.”
Jon Brodkin is senior writer at Network World.
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Comments (4)
Who's the sham?By Scott Morris on July 9, 2008, 10:12 amCertification from every vendor is tied to sales in some aspect. Sorry if your head has been buried in the sand, but nobody is coming up with a sham about it. Logic...
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RE: Flimflam ShamBy Anon on July 3, 2008, 10:38 amIf you have seen the demo of the practical you might not be so ignorant, but this test is in no way shape or form related strictly to Cisco network design. Could...
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Flimflam ShamBy Schratboy on July 3, 2008, 10:00 amReally, doesn't anybody want to come to terms with these pseudo-sales programs? They're nothing more than "shiny merit badges" for the geek designed to push more...
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$700??By Anonymous on July 2, 2008, 4:19 pmSo is $700 the real cost of the test? At the networkers session it was mentioned that the exam would be priced similarly to the CCIE practical Lab? I would assume...
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