Hello Everyone,
Late last night, Microsoft Learning did a very important announcement on their Born2Learn blog! You can now take your Microsoft Certification Exams from home! At first, this seems like a good idea since a lot of people cannot take exams because testing centers are far away. Â However, being able to take an exam from home might increase chances of people cheating at the exam, and therefore decreasing the value of the certification.Â
Microsoft decided to combat cheatnig by implementing the following steps:
- the exam is administered by a remote proctor who will supervise you via webcam and microphone while you take your test.
- You’ll be asked to empty your pockets while on camera, provide a close-up on your ears so you can prove you’re not wearing a Bluetooth earpiece, do a visual sweep of your desk and the room… all things you’d expect a proctor to check if they were there in the room with you. If you ensure that all of the requirements are met before you check in for your exam, the whole check-in process should only take about ten to fifteen minutes. If you have as many Bruce Springsteen posters on your office wall as I do, add another five minutes for the proctor to inspect them all for hidden notes.
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You’ll be recorded—both video and audio—for the duration of the exam.
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You can’t take notes during the exam.
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You can’t eat, drink, or chew gum while you take the exam.
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You can’t take a break—for any reason. Including biological ones.
In theory it all seems well, however Microsoft didn’t specify if the proctor is able to see your second screen, or stuff on your desktop!Â
The announcement ends with this line:
“And now if you’ll excuse me, I have an exam to take, and I need to go put on my Microsoft Certified Pajamas”
And I realized, Microsoft never included any dress code for taking the certification online….. I don’t wanna know what your lucky pijama looks like :P.Â
Oh yeah, and the last note is that it’s still in beta and only available for US residents at the moment.Â
What do you think about the move, is it a good move by Microsoft and you wish to see it in production all over the world , or a bad move that decreases certification value?
Personal side note:Â
Microsoft wants more testing centers close to people, however it takes away business of existing testing centers by stealing away their clients? Â How does this work? Also, do you think online training + online exam will kill the Microsoft Certified Trainer industry and in-person bootcamps or MOCs at MS Learning partners will slowly die?
All life is where you learn on each and every point. With pretty much exams. Depending on which instructive way you are following. People in IT presumably know all the Microsoft tests, which get magnificence and respect our dossier and truly, we as a whole additionally realize the diverse test focus qualities. From the chicken coop to the open-plan office, from the front light to the darkroom. Microsoft Learning is kicking off something new.
Now you can prepare any IT certification test at home by https://www.testcollections.com
Have a ton of fun considering the rules.
I am not sure if this is a trial or it is here to stay. But I think it is not really bad move as it helps consultants to take exams quickly. Do you if they are planning to reduce exam costs?
Read the article and the possiblity to cheat still exist (So yes, you can cheat). There is no possible way of completely policing an at home exam. Good idea or bad idea I cant say but, if I dont want to go to a exam center to take an exam having the option to do so at home is quite nice. To ellaborate on the exam dump sites; I dont see them as a bad thing if used in parallell with other studying materials; books and hands-on labs, etc. In my experiance, the answers on these dumps sites still require you to actually research where these answers came from. A good dump comes with source material on every answer given and anyone in there right mind would want to read that source to get a better understanding of why that answer was reached (chosen). You also have the ablity to collaborate or contest an answer with the dump file provider if you feel an answer is incorrect. Personally, dont think dumps are a bad thing if used properly.
Microsoft Just Posted an update to their blog to adress security Concerns. Â Â
Online Proctoring: So I Can Cheat, Right? Read it here: http://borntolearn.mslearn.net/btl/b/weblog/archive/2014/09/29/online-proctoring-so-i-can-cheat-right.aspxÂ
Does this Blog post make a difference to your opinion? let me know!