Hello,
I recently took the EX 374 exam, but unfortunately, I didn't pass. During the exam, I found some of the questions to be quite challenging. I understand that discussing specific exam questions is not allowed, but if there are any documents or resources you could suggest that cover difficult scenarios similar to those in the exam, I would greatly appreciate it. Any guidance or suggestions that could help me prepare better for the next attempt would be invaluable.
Thank you.
Congratulations Nageshrathod on attempting the EX374 exam.
You didn't earn a passing score, but the outcome wasn't all bad -
you verified those concepts/subjects that you knew, and those
that you didn't know or understand so well.
I"m not sure which questions you're referring to, that you mentioned
were quite challenging, but those are the type of questions that give
this exam, and all Red Hat exams, their value and recognition in
industry.
I know you're asking for recommendations about how to prepare
for you next attempt, but I'd like to ask a question before offering
any suggestion. Do you feel that there were any questions on the
exam that were not addressed/covered in the DO374 course material?
I'm not asking for the details on any specific question - just any and
all questions in general on the exam. Did the course material cover
all the concepts that were assessed by the exam?
Thanks for responding,
Yes, one question that was not covered in DO374 was asked there.
The course covers the topics, but not the difficulty level that I faced during the exam.
I would like to say that @Trevor gave some very good advice. I also want to remind you that the coures Red Hat develops are to teach concepts and skills and are not merely take this class to prepare for the exam. Often the contents of the course cover the exam materials and so so much more that the objectives on the exam.
I will agree that sometimes how the questions are presented seem like we haven't covered the content directly in the course, but I guarantee you that the basic topics were covered and possibly the implementation or specific application wasn't discussed with a 1-for-1 guided exercise or end of chapter lab.
I have taught this course many times and delivered the exam a couple of times (less now that there are remote exams), so I definitely know how tricky this exam can be. My advice is to write down as many questions as you can remember from the exam, look at the score and areas where you did poorly and map those back to the course and hands-on labs in the course. From there, I also encourage you to extend those exercises a little more and try to perform more difficult tasks or make up some of your own tasks.
I have created a repository that I use when teaching the course and share with students ...
https://github.com/tmichett/do374
It has plenty of example playbooks (including some from the DO447 - the previous version of this course) and it has a basic outline and PDF of the course with demos I use for students. This should also give more insight on things.
Keep in mind, some of the objectives, you need to build on knowledge and also there might be more than a single way to create a playbook to accomplish a given outcome. Some of the trickier things in this course are getting a really good handle on the JINJA Filters and processing the variables and data.
The other challenging thing can be building your own collections and execution environments. I encourage you to play with those and different scenarios around them to create or extend them further and go "off book" to try and build new and unique hands-on experience with the lab environment you have (providing you still have access). I also encourage you to look at the documentaion as there are some examples in there that can help provide "triggers" or "reminders" when you are taking your exam.
Knowing where to find things quickly can be just as important when a time constraint is in place. Again, the materials in the course are meant to help with understanding and teach concepts that you build on. The exam is meant to challenge you and is an attempt to determine if you've obtained mastery of those skills. The course is "Advanced Ansible Automation and Best Practices" so the idea here is you can take what you learned and extend it for real-world applications. So, while we might teach and use modules X, Y, Z in the course, you might be required to use modules A, B, C for the exam. These differences also hold true for things link filters, queries, and lookups. Knowing how to read the documentation to use modules, filters, lookups, etc. is part of the "Mastery" as this shows that when new modules or features become available you know the approach to figure out how to use them.
Travis -
My comments set the table. Your commants, cooked the meal!!!
I hope Nageshrathod appreciates the generosity you've shown
by sharing your resources.
This is an excellent write-up. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts and knowledge on taking ROL courses. I could not agree with you more. I have three white-boards behind my desk that are only for Red Hat training that I use to map concepts and I also keep open notepad ++ to make sure I am taking each concept further than the student guide does. I think its just experience taking the exams more than anything else prepares you for taking exams.
Red Hat
Learning Community
A collaborative learning environment, enabling open source skill development.