PDA

View Full Version : Cisco Wants Oral Interview As Part of CCIE Certification


HighDragLowSpeed
11 January 2009, 12:42
in order to cut down on cheating, Cisco is considering expanding an interview pilot project worldwide to certify as a CCIE. Another reason why the CCIE cert is among the most respected - they really are trying to have folks with hands-on skills and not just book knowledge.

from http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/37018

Cisco mulls adding verbal interview to CCIE exams
By Cisco Subnet on Fri, 01/09/2009 - 3:17pm.

Cisco is considering introducing a verbal interview portion to its CCIE lab exams across the world. Cisco confirmed that it is running a pilot in its exam lab in Beijing, China that involves candidates taking a 10-minute verbal interview as part of their lab exam. Cisco said that if the pilot is successful, the interview could be introduced as a requirement for CCIE Routing & Switching candidates worldwide. The company has been running the pilot since August.

The pilot first came to light in the Internetwork Expert's CCIE blog and readers have been speculating as to whether this is part of Cisco's battle to stamp out exam cheating and so-called hired gunmen and braindumps. Fred Weiller, director of marketing at Learning@Cisco said the pilot is another method to assess a candidate's skills level and to "guage if the candidate has the verbal ability to explain and answer technical questions and interface with others on problems," he said.

He added that good verbal skills would help CCIEs get better support from Cisco TACs, particularly since CCIEs are granted special access to Cisco support personnel.

Any effects of the pilot on cheating is secondary, he said.

According to an e-mail posted on the Internetwork Expert blog, candidates are asked a series of expert-level networking questions by a panel of three exam proctors. The questions are posed in English and the candidate's ability to correctly answer the questions affects their exam score. Candidates are still able to complete the practical lab once the interview is over.

Weiller said the interview is conducted in English because that's the language used in the written and the practical tests. The questions are "within the scope of the exam blueprint," he said.

Weiller added that the pilot was introduced in China because of the high level of demand for the CCIE exam in that country which gives Cisco a big sample base for the pilot.

CV
11 January 2009, 14:28
Good on them, I wish more organizations would do this.

bravodelta
20 February 2009, 12:54
Damn... and I thought oral boards only applied to military and job interviews. But this is a pretty good step to make sure the right people get certified.

bubblehead
20 February 2009, 13:02
Great news...

Cass
20 February 2009, 13:30
Good idea.

After having two custom computers built and having work done by several computer shops an oral review of anticipated Cisco grads is a must. I have had work done by expensive shops where upon pickup of my computer they were so lame with dialog that I told them to unwind what I ordered an not charge me. And they did.

My first custom computer was built by a friend where we communicated by computer. The computer came out great as he knew how to ask me questions and interpret my answers. My second custom computer was built locally where I communicated numerous times with my tech (one of 4) face to face. The end result is so bad that I am taking my one-month old custom computer to another big shop and have them pull the Hard Drive and give it to me, then install a new Hard Drive and start over.

There are techs out there that can whiz a written or mechanical exam. But when it comes to verbal narrative they could not make it past the 8th grade.

HighDragLowSpeed
20 February 2009, 15:02
There was an 8th grade?!? :tongue: