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Failed first attempt of PSK1 with 84,7%. (85,5 points scored out of 101 maximum. Need some information before buying/trying second attempt.

Last post 03:40 pm August 13, 2024 by Ashok Sharma
10 replies
09:32 pm January 21, 2020

Hello everyone,



Like you can read, yesterday evening I came close, but no cigar (I'm really p*ss*d at the moment).



according to the report I scored:

95,0% in Complementary Practices: Kanban Practices

71,9% in Complementary Practices: Agile Metrics for Kanban

78,9% in Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework



So, I've read the Scrum Guide, the Kanban Guide for Scrum Teams, the book Actionable Agile Metrics....of Daniel S. Vacanti, made a word document of all the suggested blogs and articles, saw the webinar, listened to the podcast and took a look at the Scrum Glossary.

I did the open assessments for Scrum and Scrum with Kanban until I got 100% over and over, did the 10 PSK1 training questions on a PST's website.



So, my two questions are:

1) How can I raise my knowledge in Agile Metrics for Kanban?

2) Scrolling through the Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework link on the resources page, did I also had to study the Nexus guide and the EBM guide for the PSK1 exam?



With kind regards,

René


03:06 pm January 23, 2020

I passed the PSK I exam last night. I studying the Kanban guide (read it around 15 times), read Daniel's book and practiced using the Open assessment on the scrum site as well as the mplaza questions that are tailored to this exam. I think the mplaza option is one you should consider if you didn't use it.

Experience wise, I've been using Lean/Kanban since 2006 for some of the teams I've worked with. There are differences between Lean//Kanban as described by David Anderson and Scrum with Kanban however there are also many simularities so I believe that helped as well.

In the case of all three scrum.org exams I've now passed (PSM1, PSM2, PSK1) I've found that the Open Assessment exams aren't really a good indicator of readiness to write the exam. The questions are too easy and not as potentially confusing /tricky as the ones on the actual exam. In my humble opinion these exams should be updated to give a more realistic and helpful appreciation of the preparation needed for the actual exams.


03:52 pm January 23, 2020

Hi René, have a look at Daniel’s 2nd book, https://leanpub.com/whenwillitbedone. I remember it as an improved version and easier to understand compared to “ Actionable Agile Metrics for Predictability “.

 


10:41 am January 26, 2020

Hello @james Noble and @Lars Devocht,



Thank you for your answers.



I've used the MPlaza option, but I even feel that those questions are not difficult enough compared to the real exam, they are head and shoulders above the difficulty level of the open assessment, so still a beter training tool.



I had bought Daniel's second book in bundle with his first book, but hadn't read it. So I'll read it this time.



What about the Nexus guide and EBM guide?



With kind regards,

René


02:50 pm January 26, 2020

No, I wouldn't say you need to understand Nexus or EBM. Although I took the exam more than a year and a half ago, so there's a chance that my advice isn't fully up to date.

More important is to understand the Scrum Guide and be aware that whatever you add onto Scrum, be it Kanban or something else, nothing in the Scrum Guide is invalidated.

For instance, the rules of the events are not relaxed, the roles don't change, nor do the artifacts or who is responsible or accountable for them.


10:03 pm January 26, 2020

For what it's worth I failed my first attempt at PSM2 by a similar amount. Very annoying however after some more study and focus I think I learned more great stuff to make me better at what I do.

I noticied that your lowest area is around the metrics. Have you considered studying a sprint or two, identifying those metrics (even if not being used by team) and then trying to interpret what the metrics are telling you? It could be that doing a practical exercise of this type will go someway to polishing your preparation.

~Jamie N


06:52 pm January 29, 2020

Rene

Sorry to hear that. I know you were so close to passing and its frustrating but don't feel discouraged. What I did benefit from most at the time I took the exam were the blog posts. Below is an example of one of them: 

https://www.scrum.org/resources/blog/limiting-work-progress-wip-scrum-kanban-what-when-who-how

Many of the blog posts contain very valuable information that will boost your knowledge especially about the metrics. 

On another note, I noticed you scored fairly low for the Understanding of Scrum so maybe you need to go through the scrum guide again and read an additional resource like Scrum Pocket Guide by Gunther Verheyen.

Hope this helps.

RK


08:17 pm February 10, 2020

Hello Everyone,



My apologies for the late reply, there were some private problems I had to deal with the last couple of weeks.



Thank you all for the information/advice, this weekend I'll start with my new game plan and once I'm satisfied I'm going for a second attempt.



With kind regards,

René Gysenbergs


07:42 am August 13, 2020

An update:



Until last month I was in a mental dip, I hadn't started studying for a second attempt or even for any other certificate...

and then I won on LinkedIn a seat in the PSK I online training course by Edinburgh Agile Training & Consultancy that starts this Monday, completely out of the blue.



This gave me a mental boost, so first I did an EF Language test (baby steps) to see if my English level was higher than the C1 determined four years ago and it was (C2), than I followed this with the ITIL 4  Foundation (AgileITSM) course and exam, which went very well, so now I'm eager again for the PSK I course and my second attempt.



With kind regards,

René


06:36 pm August 13, 2020

All the Best Rene, and I hope you will do good in your next attempt.



 


03:07 pm August 13, 2024

Hello Team,

I am planning to give PSK1, need guidance to achieve this certification. 

 


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