Acquiring the
Project Management Professional, PMP Certification is a challenge. It calls for
a very strong commitment to cover the syllabus fuelled by a deep seated desire
to pass the exam and above all, excellent exam question answering skills.
As a tutor who has
conducted PMP Preparation courses for a number of years, I have found that
there are two ways to pass the exam. The difficult way and the intelligent way.
I like to share with aspiring students what, in my opinion is the intelligent
way to prepare for and pass the PMP exam.
The intelligent way
to prepare for the Project Management Professional certification, PMP certification is to
adopt a three phase approach. The first phase is to have a good overview of
what the course is about and more importantly, how the different aspects of the
course link to one another. I call this developing familiarity of the coalition
of interrelated issues such as processes as well as knowledge areas that will
be covered. This is done by first reading abstracts or summaries of the
different knowledge areas and processes to have a feel of what they refer to
and try to see how these relate to one another with examples or based on your
experience. A good starting point is to read the book “Head first” that
provides excellent, simple to understand explanation of these concepts.
The second phase is
to gradually dig deeper into the topics by focusing on key underlying
principles that relate to the topic or are associated with the different
processes. A good way to do this is by highlighting key concepts and developing
your very own “things to remember” list or coming up with simple mind maps.
This should be an ongoing activity during your preparation stage. Care should
be taken during this time to be familiar with the terminology and to be aware
of the subtle differences in some of the terms / phrases such as quality control,
quality assurance etc.
The third phase is
to completely immerse yourself in answering as many PMP standard type questions
that you possibly can. There are a number of such sources that you should seek
out and do as many of the questions as possible. A list of such sources should
be identified and updated regularly. As a rule of thumb, I would recommend students
preparing for the Project Management Professional, PMP certification exam to
attempt at least 150 questions per topic and 200 questions per process group
and scoring a minimum of 75% correct. A good source of high quality, PMP exam
type questions are from Rita Mulcahy’s Exam Prep.
The more questions
you answer, the more aware you will be of your “knowledge gap” and what types
of “tricks” you can expect during the exam. Doing these questions under “exam
type” conditions where the questions have to complete within a certain time
frame helps you analyze the question and come up with an answer within the time
span allocated. To do this better you should attempt 200 questions mock exams
within the 240 minutes allocated.
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