“And Now for Something Completely Different”
- Monty Python’s Flying Circus
The new (as of Aug ’08) type of Microsoft certification questions are not completely different (emulation versus simulation), but different enough that we need to prepare in a new way.
Just as we began to adjust to the end of Microsoft’s MCSA and MCSE certifications, which has been replaced by the new MCTS/MCITP model - Microsoft is throwing us another twist.
IT professionals complained to Microsoft for years that they hated the multiple choice (e.g. A, B, C, D) style questions on certification exams. Over the years the questions had evolved into a “reading comprehension” challenge with the questions getting longer and longer (mind-numbing). Plus, if American English is not a examinee’s first language, it was a serious handicap.
The common feedback was, “Give me a system and I’ll show you that I know what to do.”
But we all know that you should be careful what you ask for, as you just might get it. Starting with the updated Windows Server 2003 exams (70-290 and 70-291), Microsoft had added a new style of question – the Simulation. During the exam, an examinee was dropped into a standard Microsoft desktop (with just a Start button) and challenged with, “Configure a Server for the following multiple features/functions”…
The “simulation” was almost what people were asking for, but with “sims” being based on VB scripts, there were limited, sometimes one way to do something. If you pick two or more people at random, they will each have a different way to use the interface – there are about six ways, on a normal system, to launch the “Task Manager”.
As of August ’08, Microsoft has a Pilot (Beta) for exam 70-113, which includes a new question style:
“The Performance Based testing method we are piloting is an exam which emulates a Windows Server 2008 infrastructure. In this infrastructure you will be tasked with completing a series of tasks. Once complete, the system will evaluate each tasks end-state to determine if the tasks have been completed and correctly implemented. This process is different from simulations because you will have every tool and path available that you would normally have in a real world scenario. Simulations restrict you to a small number of expected paths, whereas emulations allow for any path, as long as the end result is correct.”
This Pilot is scheduled to run until mid September, then, who knows what an examinee might encounter during Microsoft Server 2008 Certification testing – maybe something completely different…
