Greg,

You may not be aware, but many, if not all, academies allow the student a
retake if they fail the Skills Based Assessment (practical exam in plain
english -- just put that in since you're a lawyer) the first time.  Every
area
tasked in the practical is covered at least once in a lab experiment
during the semester.

The 60% failure rate I had indicated was for the first try.  Final pass rate
was 90%.  I don't think this is an unacceptable failure rate for CCNP
level students.  BTW, I am reminded, from my days as a consultant for
law office management systems, that there isn't anything brief about a
legal brief.

Happy Holidays All,

Prof. Tom Lisa, CCAI
Community College of Southern Nevada
Cisco Regional Networking Academy
(Still Pres., Groupstudy Old Geezers Club)

Greg Macaulay wrote:

> I'd like to inject my own .02 here -- for what it's worth.  I am a retired
> law professor -- having taught law students, lawyers and even judges over
> the years!  One of my pet peeves during my career was the inability of
> students (on whatever level) to effectively communicate both orally and
with
> the written word.
>
> For a number of years I taught in Ireland, England and Australia where
there
> was only one examination per year in each subject.  This meant that a
> student's entire grade for an entire year rested on their performance in a
> single written examination.  Since I had come from an American academic
> background, where there are finals each semester (rather than annually) and
> mid-terms, term papers, class performance, etc. I was a bit shocked at this
> different academic system.
>
> So, in an effort to both deal with my "pet peeve," and ensure that my
> students would be able to effectively communicate their knowledge on a
final
> examination, I instituted a process whereby I gave students, short papers
to
> write every two weeks and reviewed them individually with each student.
> Also, I gave continuous mock examinations to teach students to communicate
> under pressure.
>
> None of this admittedly was for "credit."  Everything still depended on a
> student's performance on their final examination.  However, by aggressively
> pushing students to master written communications during the academic year,
> I hopefully ensured that they maximized their chances of passing -- and
with
> a good grade.
>
> In fact, though I never -- never mentioned it to any student -- I never
> failed any student who showed up for my final examination.  I knew that
> their efforts in dealing with the persistent intense pressure to write
> during the year, and answer my searching cross-examinations of their
> substantive knowledge far surpassed anything they might produce during a 3
> or 4 hour written examination in June.  However, this only became an issue
> with border-line examination scores, as most students passed with
> sufficiently high-grades.
>
> In those instances where a few students who had undergone the year-long
> writing process performed badly or inadequately on the final examination, I
> was always able to give them the benefit of the doubt -- as I knew their
> true abilities from observing their efforts during the academic year.
> Oftentimes, too many external factors, such as a suddent loss of memory,
> physical ailments, fear, stress or other similar factors negatively effect
a
> student's performance on a final examination. My process was a stopgap to
> ensure that those factors were either minimized or negated entirely.
>
> Only those few who failed to attend class, either at all or sporadically
> during the year were not given the benefit of the doubt in borderline
cases.
> Everyone else was given this benefit.
>
> I mention this -- long-windedly (as I am an attorney) -- because it seems
> that there may have been a breakdown in the testing process here.  A
> teacher's responsibility -- especially in a hands-on environment as here --
> is to drum this information into students' heads -- during the acadmeic
> year -- to the point that student's know and understand  the information
> without any effort.  The lab hands-on should not be a means of eliminating
> students, but to ratify that the teacher has effectively communicated the
> information to students during the academic year.  If ALL or MOST students
> fail such an examination, it is a strong sign that the teacher has failed
> his/her responsbilities to the students.
>
> I guess I could go on, but I'll wait and see what flames this message
> brings!
>
> To all, Have a Happy and Joyous Holiday!
>
> Greg Macaulay
> (Almost) Oldest CCNP/CCDP on Earth
> Lifetime AARP member
> Retired Attorney/Law Professor
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tom Lisa" 
> To: 
> Sent: Monday, December 17, 2001 5:59 PM
> Subject: Re: cisco academy's routing skills final ,tough!!! [7:29212]
>
> > Although I would prefer that all my students passed on the first try, you
> > are correct in your assessment.  Unfortunately, having passed the CCNA
> > exam does not guarantee success at the CCNP level.  I have stated
> > before that I like to compare the Cisco certs to the Crafts skills
> > designators.
> > I consider the CCNA an apprentice, the CCNP journeyman, and
> > CCIE master craftsman level of expertise.  Not all apprentices make it
> > to the journeyman level and very few journeymen ascend to the Master
> > craftsman level.
> >
> > Prof. Tom Lisa, CCAI
> > Community College of Southern Nevada
> > Cisco Regional Networking Academy
> >
> >
> > Brian Whalen wrote:
> >
> > > I really don't agree that everyone should pass, tho perhaps that was a
> > > wisecrack I didn't see.  Inevitably in any class some students try and
> > > some don't.  If everyone fails then yes perhaps that is a problem, but
> > > given the material difficulty, I would expect a substantial failure
> rate.
> > >
> > > Brian "Sonic" Whalen
> > > Success = Preparation + Opportunity
> > >
> > > On Sat, 15 Dec 2001, Tom Lisa wrote:
> > >
> > > > I resemble that remark!
> > > >
> > > > Prof. Tom Lisa, CCAI
> > > > Community College of Southern Nevada
> > > > Cisco Regional Networking Academy
> > > >
> > > > Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > It sounds like some old-fashioned meanie wrote this test.
> > > >
> > > > > Priscilla
> > > > >
> > > > > At 12:32 PM 12/14/01, brian hall wrote:
> > > > > >Just a message to those who (like me!) thinking that reading,
doing
> > labs
> > > > and
> > > > > >taking multiple choice test will prepare you for the real world
and
> > > > > >(hopefully)the CCIE lab need to be exposed to cisco's network
> accademy
> > > > > >semester 5 skills final . I just took it yesterday and failed . In
> > fact
> > > > the
> > > > > >whole class failed!!!!.
> > > > > >
> > > > > >One of our students who scored high on most test and blazed
through
> > the
> > > > > >final written exam in 10 mins, walked out in frustration .
> > > > > >Another student who works as an administrator, was are best chance
> of
> > > > having
> > > > > >someone pass missed it . I myself knew after an hour that if you
> don't
> > > > have
> > > > > >those commands down cold with a solid understanding of how to
> > implement
> > > > them
> > > > > >your GOOSE is cooked !!! . You do have the option to have your own
> > written
> > > > > >notes to help but that might weigh you down if too much is in
front
> of
> > > > you .
> > > > > >Working on idividual labs is one thing but putting the whole
> > environment
> > > > > >together is a whole different animal .
> > > > > >
> > > > > >Once given the actual skills asessment designing, implementing and
> > trouble
> > > > > >shooting you assume that this ones in the bag . The environment
> wasn't
> > > > large
> > > > > >and looking back at the running config's there wasnt much to them
> > other
> > > > than
> > > > > >having MED and CBAC . Ah!!! but how wrong I was!!! I'll spare the
> > details
> > > > > >and say that this was an eye opener . It showed me what I really
> don't
> > > > know
> > > > > >and to do the job in the real world will take a lot work on my
part
> .
> > > > > >
> > > > > >Buyer Beware !!!
> > > > > >
> > > > > >Overall it was good to go through and to be pushed just shows the
> weak
> > > > areas
> > > > > >FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
> > > > > >http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
> > > > > >Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > > >
> > > > > ________________________
> > > > >
> > > > > Priscilla Oppenheimer
> > > > > http://www.priscilla.com




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