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...Home ... Editorial ... Columns ..Column Story Sunday: January 31, 2010
TechMentor Conferences


 Certification Advisor  
Greg Neilson
Greg Neilson


 Certification Ethics 101
Two exam preparation shortcuts that true IT professionals should avoid at all costs.
by Greg Neilson  
9/12/2001 -- It wasn't that long ago that certification exam preparation products didn't exist at all. You either took the vendor class, or you knew the material anyhow and took your chances with the exam.

Since then, certification has become a huge boon to technical book publishing -- a myriad of test preparation tools keep springing up. In most cases, we pay the money for these products to shorten the time taken to prepare for the exams and also to improve the chances of passing that exam. However, there's a couple of shortcut approaches I would advise you not to take.

The first shortcut I feel you need to make a decision NOT to use are braindump Web sites. The word "braindump" has a variety of meanings, but in this context it means someone has written down the test questions they experienced together with their suggested answers. Sometimes these can be quite organized with a number of test takers putting their thoughts together, resulting in a fairly large pool of questions for each.

To put it simply, braindumps are cheating. I guess some people rationalize this away by declaring that certification exams often ask about obscure product features; but, at the end of the day, by using these resources you are cheating yourself and also everyone else who has or wants to hold that certification. We've seen a model for this with Microsoft's NT 4.0 MCSE exams. Unfortunately there is now a common perception that braindump sites have been used all too often by participants, so it is often felt that the certification itself is not worth as much as it used to. There have been many steps taken by Microsoft to reduce the effectiveness of these sites for Windows 2000 exams, but undoubtably some devious people will eventually find ways to get around this.

Another area that concerns me is that so many test participants seem to view Transcender exam preparation software as freeware. (This happens with other products as well, but I see it most often with Transcender.) I must say that I don't use Transcender's products myself, and I don't have any stock in their company, but these are licensed products and I feel that they should be treated as such. People who wouldn't dream of using pirate operating systems or office suites seem to have no qualms about swapping pirate versions of Transcender's offerings. I've heard people say that these products are useful exam preparation tools, and I'm assuming that people justify the piracy because of the high price of the products, but that's a pretty poor reason. A few years ago I used to get many unsolicited e-mails from people wanting me to share pirate copies of Transcender (although I'd never bought any!), but now I think people are more suspect about making this piracy known. With the completed certification in hand, we have the intention of showing the world that we're capable IT professionals (stress on the word "professional") and not pirates.

Please give some thought to your ethical situation as you prepare for your exams. You may not agree with my opinions here, but it's a good idea to at least make up your own mind on where you stand on these issues. What do you think: Am I too idealistic, or are there other areas you think need to be avoided in order to ethically prepare for exams? Let me know by posting your thoughts below.


Greg Neilson, MCSE+Internet, MCNE, PCLP, is a Contributing Editor for Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine and a manager at a large IT services firm in Australia. He's the author of Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell (O'Reilly and Associates, ISBN 1-56592-717-6). You can reach him at Attn: Greg.

 


More articles by Greg Neilson:

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There are 45 CertCities.com user Comments for “Certification Ethics 101”
Page 3 of 5
9/22/01: Don't Ask says: P.S. I was lucky in that I could pay for training with the necessary equipment but I would've gladly taken an entry-level job doing the same thing and prepping for the exams.
9/24/01: Alab says: You started this essay on Certification Ethics 101 but ALL comments seem to focus ONLY on Microsoft exams. I would extend this logic to ALL certification exams - from entry-level to advanced. True merit and worth cannot be justified through short-cuts like braindumps. In fact, I gather that the industry association CompTIA (who offer certifications like the A+, Network+ exams etc.) has been the FIRST organization to sue braindumps that they believe have been compromising on the integrity of CompTIA's exams. Now, I am told other big companies (including Microsoft) are backing this effort. I feel we should all back CompTIA is this laudable effort.
9/25/01: mike says: What ever happened to simple hard work? Study, Study study. I work 2 dead end jobs to support my family and am going to school at night for an IT / networking course that covers A+, net+, mcse and mcdba. I passed my A+ exams with 825 and 835 conventional tests. I did not cheat, I studied. I am new to IT but is see the point that is made by paper certs who cheated or brain dumped their way to the cert. It seems to me these people will be found out when they get a job their certified for but cannot actually do. It is very simple study! nothing worth anything comes easy or free. Cert ethic 101 is the title of this article but it comes down to some people taking the easy way instead of the proper way.
9/26/01: Anonymous says: (M)ust (C)ontinuously (S)tudy for (E)xams
9/29/01: Rex says: The onus is on Microsoft to keep one step ahead of the testtakers. They should receive any and all of the criticism. How would you like it if your brain surgeon only passed a multiple choice test to work on your head. Come on, get with it MS! Experience is first, certification is last. So it doesn't matter how you get your cert, if you have no experience, I don't want you. I don't care if you spent 20 grand on classes and books. I'll hire one who's read the braindumps before one who's taken and read overpriced courses and books because dumpreaders have one quality I look for; Efficiency.
9/29/01: Greg says: Rex Inc - Aren't you contradicting yourself here? Surely if someone has the experience (which I agree is what hiring managers really want), then why do they need to look at braindumps? In that case they should be able to pass the exams anyway because they live and breathe this stuff.
9/30/01: Big KB says: None of you have to worry about paper MCSE's because with the economy in a downturn there are many qualified professionals who are seeking work that have the experience to go with it.
9/30/01: Rex says: Greg, do you think that experienced Network Admins can ace the exams without lifting a page of study material? I'd think not.
9/30/01: Rex says: Therefore, it's not contradiction. It's just irony. And the world is full of that.
9/30/01: Greg says: Rex, I'm not saying that experienced network admins don't need to prepare for the certification exams, but reviewing a couple of self-study books doesn't cost 20 grand either.
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