Eliminate what you know to be incorrect and make your best attempt at selecting one of the "most correct" answers that remain. If you can identify "where you are" as Andrew mentioned, the odds should be on your side.
Dear Carl, yap elimination strategy really work to throw out all noise in finding best answer. Saving Changes...
That is the best improvement in certification exam. If you do not have practical experience in project manager is difficult you can answer situational questions right.
Dear Sergio, I have about 20 years in construction field. Hope can get through this.
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1 reply by Sergio Luis Conte
Oct 17, 2017 5:08 AM
Sergio Luis Conte
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If and only if your answers are what the PMI expect as an answer in the framework of PMBOK.
Saving Changes...
Sergio Luis ConteHelping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based OrganizationsBuenos Aires, Argentina
Oct 17, 2017 5:06 AM
Replying to Br. Ts. PUI CHEE KHIAN
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Dear Sergio, I have about 20 years in construction field. Hope can get through this.
If and only if your answers are what the PMI expect as an answer in the framework of PMBOK. Saving Changes...
1. Make sure you read the whole question and know what they are (and are not!) asking for.
2. Put yourself into the mindset of a "large and in charge" PM, regardless of what the power structure is for PMs in your company. That means favoring answers which are action-oriented or proactive over ones where you are "passing the buck".
3. Don't cut corners, skip processes or act with less than full transparency or integrity.
4. Focus on customer satisfaction.
Kiron
Dear Kiron, appreciate your advice. I definitely will take your advice. Nice guy you are. Saving Changes...
Go through as many situational question/answers as possible before appearing in the exam. Saving Changes...
Anton OosthuizenSenior Business Analyst / Project Manager| Self EmployedPretoria, Gauteng, South Africa
A common approach on long (situational) question is the read the last part first i.e. the actual question. Typically the question would go - 'Peter and John have blonde hair and yesterday Peter took Johns lunch.' and then end with - 'will they still be friends?'. Then you read the whole question. What this allows you to do is to easily identify and eliminate the fluff that is not relevant to the question. The fact that they have blonde hair has no bearing on the actual question.
Then eliminate the obvious wrong options, there are normally two. Saving Changes...