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Tag Archives: goals

It’s Certification Month! (How To Prepare for a Certification Exam)

12 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by cosmichomicide in Geeky

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certifications, geeky, goals

Yup.  I’ve been slack and I have a stack of certifications that need to be updated to current versions and another stack that I need to complete.  So what better topic for an article than preparation steps.  I’ve taken more than 100 certification exams for more than 8 different vendors over the course of my IT career as well as written exam questions for 2 vendors, so hopefully this might help someone who is facing that first exam.

  1. Figure out which certification you want to achieve.  Go to the vendor’s site and look for “certification paths” or “certification roadmaps”.  This can save you both money and angst since for many vendors there are overlapping exams and exams that pretty much don’t count towards any certification at all.
  2. Make a list of the exams you need to take and any courses or books that are recommended.  Make sure you include the costs of the exams, books and courses in the list.  This can add up quickly and a lot of people don’t realize the total outlay to getting a certification.  Courses can be optional or they may be required, depending on the vendor.  Note whether the course is required and whether there is an online or self study option (these may be cheaper, but you need more self direction using this path).
  3. If courses are required, start looking at training companies, costs and schedules now.  If a course you have to have is only delivered every 6 months locally and is coming up quickly, you may need to adjust your schedule to get that in “out of order”.  Double check that the course aligns with the exam you are planning to take – sometimes all the topics tested aren’t part of the course.
  4. Start a notebook, either paper or virtual (whichever works best for you) to collect all the exam and certification information.  Add your overall list from step one and your cost sheet from step two.  Go to the vendor site for the specific exam and look for a list of “skills measured” (or something similar).  This will be all the topics that will be covered on the exam and (generally) a weighting of which topics will have more questions.  Print this out for your first exam and add it to your notebook.
  5. Set up a study area with a computer and your notebook.  As you take courses or purchase books, put these here as well.  Don’t try to drag things around with you everywhere.  If you are planning to take online courses, invest in a webcam, headset and microphone.  Don’t go cheap on the headset – you’ll be wearing it for long periods.
  6. (Optional) If you have never taken any exams by a particular vendor, see if they provide or recommend any sample questions or sample test providers.  Knowing the format, timing and exam methodology can be the difference between taking an exam once and spending the money twice.  Make sure you know the type of exam and whether you can skip questions, take notes, and the scoring mechanism for questions.  Watch for specials – sample tests providers will periodically have sales or offer bundles for entire certification tracks.
  7. Make sure you have access to the software if you are taking a software exam.  I know this seems common sense, but it is critical that you be able to SEE and DO what you are studying.  Evaluation and demo copies may be fine for this purpose, just make sure that the evaluation period coincides with your study schedule so you don’t run out of evaluation before you are ready to test.
  8. Lay out a study schedule.  Make sure it is reasonable and you can stick to it.  Include any courses in the schedule.  Make sure you leave time at the end to review the skill metrics and go back to the areas where you are still a bit shaky and might need a bit more work.
  9. If you opted for purchasing sample tests, take at least one first.  This should identify your strong and weak areas up front and give you an idea of the areas in which you need to focus.  Don’t skip areas based on this, but use your time wisely.
  10. Schedule your exam.  Yes, schedule it up front.  This gives you a hard and fast date to aim for and will keep you from putting it off and losing motivation.  Nothing like cash on the line to keep you on track.
  11. Take your course or start studying your books.  (Can’t skip this one, I’m afraid).  Take notes as you go on the areas that may need additional review.  Important – if you take a course, take the exam no more than two weeks after you complete the course.  Memories fade.
  12. Exam day minus 1-7 days!  Review any ID requirements or materials needed.  If you are taking the exam online, make sure your computer meets the requirements and run any tests for webcam, headset, microphone, etc.  Take any sample tests and review any areas of weakness.
  13. Exam day!  Don’t cram.  Eat a good breakfast.  Double check that you have any required exam passes, ID, materials, etc.  Use the bathroom before the exam begins.  Keep an eye on the clock.  If you can go back and forth on the exam, do the questions that you know first, return to the ones about which you are unsure.  (Do NOT do this for a dynamic exam – dynamic exams determine the next question based on the answer to the previous one and you can fail quickly by guessing or skipping questions.)  If there is paper available, write down (quickly) any key tables, formulas, etc. that will make answering questions about them faster.  Don’t write down everything, LOL!  And finally, eliminate obvious wrong answers first.  There is only one 100% correct answer, so looking for what isn’t right can be very effective on questions where you aren’t completely sure what is right.
  14. If you pass – yay!  Celebrate and take a week before starting on the next exam study.  If you fail, don’t despair.  Consider it a learning experience and study the exam report.  Likely it will identify the areas where you have a knowledge weakness – schedule a retake (some vendors have free retakes) and focus your next round of study on these areas, making sure to go through the software and any labs or demos related to these.

One word of warning – do NOT use “cheat” or “cram” sites.  The answers are as likely to be wrong as right and in some cases use of these violates the terms of use for the exam.  Do not contribute to these sites as that definitely violates the terms of use.  Keep in mind that the goal is not only to gain the certification but also to gain the skills to be able to do the job.

Good luck!

Walking/Running/Hobbling Gear I Love

11 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by cosmichomicide in Cheapskate, Health, Stuff that Works

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goals, health, money

I’m not a big “go out and buy a bunch of stuff” person.  I’m actually more of a “haunt the thrift stores until good quality clothes show up” person.  But I never buy second hand shoes (or a few other things because it’s just a bad idea) because they mold and stretch to the wearer and because well – ick.  There are a few other things that don’t show up in thrifts as well.  So, what did I actually buy?

I already have an article on my Merrell barefoot runners so I won’t rehash that here.  I do consider music to be absolutely essential and I can see on my Endomondo graphs where the BPM affects my speed (and distance if my playlist runs out before I do).  So I’ve invested in a running sleeve to hold my phone (Nokia 920), an Endomondo premium account (which has the cool feature of showing you which songs were playing at what points along with tracking distance, speed, personal bests and routes) and my Xbox music pass.  I use JogFM to find playlists and songs with the right BPM for various goals (free).

Other than that and a few pieces of cold weather gear I picked up on sale, it’s a pair of shorts, a good sports bra (I love my UnderArmor, but this is definitely a category for finding the best fit and brand for the individual) and one of my gazillion technical t-shirts.  I do wear a bright, white or reflective item any time I’m out before or after full sun (which is constant in the summer).  And a hat.  The only thing I don’t compromise on at all is the footwear – I track the mileage and replace whether I think my shoes need it or not.  I figure my feet are something I’m going to want to have around and functioning as long as I am so they are worth the investment. 🙂

Barefoot (Almost) and Running (Almost)

07 Sunday Jul 2013

Posted by cosmichomicide in Changes & Progress, Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

goals, health

Well, it’s really going to be a walk/run depending on how well I adapt to my new minimal running shoes.  Which I will be working on slowly getting used to starting today.  Shin splints and plantar fasciitis have plagued me for almost a year now and it feels like I’ve tried every exercise, insert and shoe on the planet.  So I stopped and spent some time thinking about when my feet felt best and most pain free and it was when I was wearing my ancient Merrell walking sandals or plodding around the house and yard shoeless.  Having dismissed (without really investigating) the whole running toe sock fad, I decided to take another look and discovered my friends at Merrell have minimalist trail and road shoes.  I gotta admit the second I put my feet in one of the “gloves” I was in love.

My first race in the new gear will be the NC Music Factory Rock ‘n’ Run/Walk in Charlotte on August 10th, giving me one month to get used to the shoes and get them broken in.  Hopefully a week walking around Las Vegas (vacation) and some gradual mileage increases using the Merrell barefoot training program and tips before that will do the trick.  This is a good 5K for it as there are a lot of walkers and the race is a ton of fun with music, bands, vendors and breakfast.  Plus it’s nice to do an event multiple years and the course is much more even than a lot around here which will probably be a good thing for testing out footwear.  We shall see – updates to come as I ramp up.

Bucket List Item – Complete a 5K

04 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by cosmichomicide in Bucket List, Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

bucket list, goals, health

Yeah, it’s only a little over 3 miles.  Still, lots of people think about doing a race (even a short one) and never do.  I decided to do the Speed for Children in Need 5K at the Charlotte Motor Speedway on December 11, 2011 and I dragged the consort along with me.  I decided from the start that I was going to walk the race as finishing was the priority and I had developed some pretty painful shin splints along the way while getting ready for it.  The race started at the drag strip, went up and over the pedestrian bridge, down and through the tunnel and then finished on the track.  It was frankly pretty cool though the up and down and sideways walking (that track is SLOPED) caught us by surprise.  We finished within the race time (and weren’t dead last).  I’ve done several 5Ks since then and finishing is always pretty neat, but I have to admit the first one (slow as it was) was the biggest rush of accomplishment.  And it got me to add a 10K to the list.  I didn’t do this race last year, but I think I’ll do it this year.  And run this time.

The War on the Food Budget

30 Sunday Jun 2013

Posted by cosmichomicide in Changes & Progress, Cheapskate, Health, Home

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goals, health, home, money

Yep, we spend way too much on food and eating out.  I mean way too much.  This is the biggest and easiest way for us to save money.  The harsh truth is we used to eat out once a week as a family night, now we do it because we just don’t feel like cooking.  And it’s costing us.  As in about $600 per month which is ridiculous.  And a good chunk of that isn’t even on good food.  So… July we revert on the eating out, August we tackle the grocery store spending.  Beginning with this upcoming week – 1 (good) family meal out per week, no fast food, 1 lunch out at work.  Monthly dining out budget we’re starting at a 50% cut to $300 (yes, it should probably be less, but let’s see how it goes).  That should save $3600/year which puts us on the road to that $12000 per year goal.

In June we saved $180/year with the cellular provider change.  This should move us to $3780/year.  We might see some increase in the grocery bill as an offset, but I expect that would do nothing but improve the quality of what we are eating, so it’s a fair tradeoff.  Then again, eating at home may well make us more efficient at the grocery store as well – but that’s for another month.  My bank provides Quicken FinanceWorks as an online service, so I’m setting the “Dining” category limit to $300 and will be checking our progress every week.  This afternoon we’ll have a family discussion on which night we want to reserve for eating out and how food that comes through a window isn’t really food. 😉

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