Well, think about it this way. You have a test with 26
questions.
You get a
===
Section 1: 100%
Section 2: 33%
Section 3: 33%
Final Score: 85%
===
It doesn't make much since until you consider what they
don't tell you.
Section 1: 20 questions
Section 2: 3 questions
Section 3: 3 questions
so,
(1*20) + (0.33*3) + (0.33*3) = 22
22/26 = 84.6%
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 10, 2001 6:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Passed CCIE Written [7:28772]
For a long time now I had ignored the Cisco scoring pattern,
the bottom line
is that you passed. When I was writing my CCNP/CCDP series,
I discover that
in 2 of the papers I got on each 2 100%, a few 30-something
% and an
embarasing 0% but the final score read 80-something %, close
to 90%. From
that time I start ignoring their scoring system, Cisco need
to re-write
their scoring algorithm.
Congrats, on to the big moster.
Regards.
Oletu
- Original Message -
From: Derek Gaff
To:
Sent: Monday, December 10, 2001 4:32 PM
Subject: Passed CCIE Written [7:28772]
Passed CCIE Written today, Was not a bit impressed with my
score, got 71%
with
a pass score of 70%. Just scraped the bucket with this
one. Although I
can't
understand there scoring method. I got 100% in 3 items,
80% in 2 and
between
50 and 70% in the rest. :-)
Anyway, a pass is a pass no matter what the score is.
Thanks for all the
information and thoughts.
Cheers Derek
_
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