![]() ![]() ![]() And then from there you can go onto SH and take the practice questions and quizzes / exams. Focusing on Agile and the Mindset, plus watching the 3 David McLachlan videos for 200 Waterfall questions / 100 Agile questions / 150 PMBOK questions, will have you way more prepared than need be. I took the exam by knowing the mindset and was able to eliminate the 3 incorrect answers more than I was actually looking for the correct answer. The Agile section of his course is much better in that it gives more situation-based material so I would say focus more on that, AND KNOW THE MINDSET. So not worth the time to review the waterfall section. ARs course on Udemy, 29.99 TIAs PMP exam simulator, 39.99 Study Hall, 49 PMBOK Guide (7th) ENG, and Agile Practice Guide as reference, free for PMI membership. ![]() The exam does* have a few questions like this of course, but you can probably count them on two hands. Reddit iOS Reddit Android Rereddit Best Communities Communities About Reddit Blog Careers Press. I also planned to review the sections after I completed the course before moving on to SH and other resources but eventually decided to just scrap that entirely after learning just how much of the exam is situation based questions instead of the types of questions you'd get on AR quizzes like "if this happens, what plan do you update?" or "which document would you look into find XYZ information?". The exam, on the other hand, is entirely situational based and asks you "if this happens, what do you do" or "a team member comes to you and says this happened, what is the next step". The difference between the exam and the AR course is that, although it's very informative and very well done, the AR course is structured more as a memorization-based course for the first half (the Waterfall / Predictive stuff) where you spend 20 hours at least learning what a process is / what it's about and then a whole list of ITTO's. As someone who passed last week with 3xAT (don't say that to brag but just to show I know what I'm talking about here from having done it), I also took the AR Udemy course and did the WHOLE class with intentional listening and a slow pace in order to understand the material, PLUS taking notes on every single section from start to end including writing down the slides but then also adding in some of his verbal notes / comments. ![]()
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