cupojoe PE PMP
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- Apr 9, 2013
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I passed the PMP exam today. I wanted to put some notes here for anyone else who might be thinking about it.
My company offered the 35 hour training classes that covers the PMBOK, so if you are looking for a class, I'm probably not much help here. My company also had a structured study group session. I didn't find it all that helpful, so I stopped going, but I could see how someone would find that helpful.
By far the most useful book that I used was the Rita Mulcahy book. She passed away several years ago, but continues to author books, Tupac style. I read the Rita book cover to cover and did many of the exercises and all of the end of chapter tests. I also used the book Head First PMP, the questions in that book were good, and helped me flush out things that I didn't know. I looked through some other books the library had available, and found them to be substandard.
When I took the PE, I used SchoolofPE.com. They have since started a sister service, SchoolofPM.com. They had an online trial that promised 200 questions, for free. Then you could get additional sets of 200 questions by paying more money (the lowest was $25), so I thought that might be worth it. When I took the free Test (Test 1) there were only 150 questions, some of them were duplicate, others they forgot to fill in some of the answers, and just a lot of grammar and other typos. I decided it was not worth paying for their service. This was especially disappointing, because I think so highly of their PE test services. Hopefully they improve this for future test takers.
In total I spent the 35 hours for the required live class (though I don't feel this was a necessary to pass the exam, only required to get approved to take exam). Then probably 40-50 hours studying for the exam. (I spent probably 300+ hours including SOPE class for the PE exam) On Practice tests I was scoring between 65-78% before the exam, then going back and figuring out what I did wrong. On the results from the actual test, I receive moderate proficiency in Initiating, Planning, and Executing. I receive Proficient in Monitoring & Controlling and Closing.
Also the PMBOK is the dullest book I have ever attempted to read and gave up quickly. Have it for reference, but don't try to read it. The book wasn't cheap, if you join PMI you can get the book as a PDF for free, this is adequate for how little I used it. Plus they price the test so that it is slightly cheaper to join PMI for year when you apply for the test, so really it means the book is free. All-in-all, the hardest part was setting aside what I do at work and learning the PMI way. For example on estimates at work for Rough Order of Magnitude, we target +/-50%, PMBOK wants -25%/+75%. For the next level, we target +/-20%, PMBOK wants -10%/+25%, and for the bottoms-up estimate, at work we use +/-10% the PMBOK wants the same. So there aren't great differences, but they do need to be remembered. In reality, if we were to target the PMBOK numbers at work, we'd probably end up with the same number. Oh yeah, the ITTOs are pointless, don't look at them, memorize them, anything. Just read the book and understand each process and how it fits into the larger picture and the ITTO won't be needed.
My company offered the 35 hour training classes that covers the PMBOK, so if you are looking for a class, I'm probably not much help here. My company also had a structured study group session. I didn't find it all that helpful, so I stopped going, but I could see how someone would find that helpful.
By far the most useful book that I used was the Rita Mulcahy book. She passed away several years ago, but continues to author books, Tupac style. I read the Rita book cover to cover and did many of the exercises and all of the end of chapter tests. I also used the book Head First PMP, the questions in that book were good, and helped me flush out things that I didn't know. I looked through some other books the library had available, and found them to be substandard.
When I took the PE, I used SchoolofPE.com. They have since started a sister service, SchoolofPM.com. They had an online trial that promised 200 questions, for free. Then you could get additional sets of 200 questions by paying more money (the lowest was $25), so I thought that might be worth it. When I took the free Test (Test 1) there were only 150 questions, some of them were duplicate, others they forgot to fill in some of the answers, and just a lot of grammar and other typos. I decided it was not worth paying for their service. This was especially disappointing, because I think so highly of their PE test services. Hopefully they improve this for future test takers.
In total I spent the 35 hours for the required live class (though I don't feel this was a necessary to pass the exam, only required to get approved to take exam). Then probably 40-50 hours studying for the exam. (I spent probably 300+ hours including SOPE class for the PE exam) On Practice tests I was scoring between 65-78% before the exam, then going back and figuring out what I did wrong. On the results from the actual test, I receive moderate proficiency in Initiating, Planning, and Executing. I receive Proficient in Monitoring & Controlling and Closing.
Also the PMBOK is the dullest book I have ever attempted to read and gave up quickly. Have it for reference, but don't try to read it. The book wasn't cheap, if you join PMI you can get the book as a PDF for free, this is adequate for how little I used it. Plus they price the test so that it is slightly cheaper to join PMI for year when you apply for the test, so really it means the book is free. All-in-all, the hardest part was setting aside what I do at work and learning the PMI way. For example on estimates at work for Rough Order of Magnitude, we target +/-50%, PMBOK wants -25%/+75%. For the next level, we target +/-20%, PMBOK wants -10%/+25%, and for the bottoms-up estimate, at work we use +/-10% the PMBOK wants the same. So there aren't great differences, but they do need to be remembered. In reality, if we were to target the PMBOK numbers at work, we'd probably end up with the same number. Oh yeah, the ITTOs are pointless, don't look at them, memorize them, anything. Just read the book and understand each process and how it fits into the larger picture and the ITTO won't be needed.
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