![]() And there are generally two reasonable answers. The longer questions often have a "do nothing" answer like wait or delay, an over-reaction answer like "stop the project" or "escalate to project manager". I give my 2c on how to think about these questions in the following links. The most IMPORTANT thing you need is a strategy for the longer questions and to plow through these quickly. And, of course, this makes everything very fair. If the difficulty is "high" you need to score less correct answers than say someone with an "easy" test. ![]() Your random selection of questions may trend easier or harder (I assume each question must have some sort of difficulty rating). Any mock exam you do now should also contain questions on agile/hybrid, not just the knowledge areas, which means you do need to know agile materials.Actually, PMI has a huge test bank of questions. I’d switch up between studying the knowledge areas and agile just to not get bored, but I don’t think it makes any difference exactly when to study for what. Also watched Aileen Ellis and Andrew Ramdayal on YouTube. Googling the terms or concepts that I always got wrong was also helpful. I can’t guarantee that that is the same book though because again, the school gave me the pdf version and I don’t recall seeing that cover page as the one from Amazon. It looks like the book is on Amazon ( keywords=pmp+exam+simplified&qid=1624028228&sprefix=pmp+exam+sim&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUExMDVMUU.). They provided a PMP simplified book (in pdf format only) written by Andrew Ramdayal, which I used for my study, not the PMBOK. For the entire exam in general, I took the prep course with TIA ( ). ![]() For the agile prep, I did what I mentioned above. That's my learning style and how I understands pmbok style of project management.Īt the beginning of my pmp journey, I read through hundred of post in this subreddit and bookmarked links of recommended resources of study aid. It helps with narrowing down to 1-2 likely answers quickly. ![]() I reviewed the "mindset" PowerPoint from UDemy often. I did 1 Tia mock exam per day, and reviewed just the wrong answer. Its 6 hours long, but i practiced just 1 hours of it I also viewed Agile youtube,, that came recommended on this subreddit. ![]() I reviewed my notebook and covered knowledge gap with AR book & Google. I read the entire AR book, did quiz at end of every chapter and reviewed every answer. So altogether 3 months with one month of buckled-down studyingĮven though I skipped Udemy videos, I took the Udemy 180 questions exam at the very end, reviewed every questions and took note in a notebook on why my answer selection is right or wrong. That's when I really buckled down and taking time away from family going to coffee shops to read and practice with TIAExams. I started studying AR book late May 2022 during evenings after kids are in bed.Īnd it being the summer with kids out of school, studying was on/off until August, a month before my exam on September 7. I have 15 years managing IT projects but my job titles is anything but that. This time around, I didn't touch pmbok 6/7 at all because after reading AR book, I realized PMBOK is meant to be used as a reference material. I reviewed a few and only scanned through the restĥ-7 years ago before I knew about this subreddit, I had the PMBOK 5(or 6) book and tried to read it all. I also listed all of the resources I found on this subreddit at the very end of this post. Andrew Ramdayal (AR) is the one who produced. ![]()
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