Inside The Microsoft Exam - Part 3 of a Series
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Inside The Microsoft Exam - Part 3 of a Series

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• Relates to: MCSE 2000 | MCSE 2003 | MCSA 2000 | MCSD .NET | MCDBA | MOS XP Master | MCNE | MCSA 2003 | MCSA 2003 Upgrade | MCSE 2003 Upgrade

In Parts I and II of the Series we looked at the issue of course-to-exam mapping for Microsoft exams. Often courses don't map perfectly to exams. That is, exams often test on material that either is or appears to be outside the courses that the exams are supposed to be based on. There are a variety of reasons for this. But, the primary reason is that Microsoft exams are designed to test you on your "real-world" knowledge and skills, not on your ability to memorize the courseware. In order to test your "real-world" skills, Microsoft designs exam items that require you to do more than simply recall information. To better understand Microsoft exams and, as a result, to improve your ability to study for the exams, it is instructive to look at how Microsoft creates exams.

Many people might be surprised to learn that, although MS is responsible for exam development, MS staff generally do not write the exam items that appear on the exams. For the most part, exam items are written by contractors from outside MS. Exam item writers will receive training from MS on how to write items so they meet the requirements for the exams. For example, one of the requirements of the Windows 2000 exams is they be targeted at an audience that has a minimum of one year's experience supporting Windows 2000 in environments that have 200+ users and multiple physical locations. Exam item writers are also provided instruction on how to use Bloom's Taxonomy to guide the construction of questions.

Bloom's Taxonomy for the cognitive domain is a model that classifies 6 different levels of cognitive behavior, from the simple recall of facts through more increasingly complex and abstract levels. The six levels of Bloom's Taxonomy are:

LEVEL TYPICAL TASKS

1) Knowledge - recall, duplicate, refine, arrange  
2) Comprehension - classify, explain, locate, translate  
3) Application - apply, calculate, solve, demonstrate  
4) Analysis - analyze, compare, contrast, criticize, examine  
5) Synthesis - assemble, compose, construct, design, plan  
6) Evaluation - evaluate, assess, judge, rate, predict

Exam writers are instructed to avoid writing questions that test at the lowest levels of Bloom's Taxonomy, for example, asking questions that require candidates to choose the appropriate tool to use in a particular situation or correctly match a term with a definition. These kinds of questions do not require anything beyond the ability to simply recall or comprehend information. However, a question that asked a candidate to calculate subnet masks for a given network configuration might be appropriate for an exam item as long as it was constructed in such a way that the candidate had to do more than simply recall a table of subnet masks, for example, plan subnet masks for a hierarchical router environment.

Along with the training that exam writers receive on Bloom's Taxonomy, they are also given a list of exam objectives, also known as the objective domain, to write on. MS develops the objective domains according to a rigorous process. As part of this development process, MS performs a Job Task Analysis (JTA) survey that is sent out to industry professionals. The results of the survey help MS determine the skills and the tasks associated with successfully deploying, implementing, and managing particular technologies.

Notice here that the courseware is not used to determine the exam objectives. The exam item creation process is driven primarily by Bloom's Taxonomy and the objective domain, not the courseware. Having said that, the courseware will overlap significantly with the exams for two reasons:

1) the courseware will be teaching similar skills and knowledge identified in the JTA survey, and

2) the course materials may themselves be used as a technical resource to develop exam items. However, the exam writers will be consulting their own experience and a number of different technical resources; they may, if they wish, avoid the courseware entirely as a resource for writing items.

Once the exam writers have written their questions, they submit them for review to editors at MS. The role of the editors is to help ensure that the questions adequately map to a high enough level on Bloom's Taxonomy, that they map properly to the objective domains, that they are clearly expressed, and that they are not tricky or deceiving (no bogus interface names or commands, for example). Questions may have to be revised many times before they can go on to the next stage.

Once the questions make it past the editorial review, they are submitted for technical review. The technical review, also known as an Alpha review, is a face-to-face meeting involving technical contributors and editors. The purpose of...

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