Inside The Microsoft Exam - Part 2 of a Series
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Inside The Microsoft Exam - Part 2 of a Series

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• Relates to: MCSE 2000 | MCSE 2003 | MCSA 2000 | MCSD .NET | MCDBA | MOS XP Master | MCNE | MCSA 2003 | MCSA 2003 Upgrade | MCSE 2003 Upgrade

Many people who take Microsoft exams often complain that the exam they took does not map well to the course that the exam is supposed to be based on. For some courses and exams, this is true. And, in these instances studying the courseware alone will make it difficult to pass the exam. Complicating the issue of course-to-exam mapping is the use of scenario-based questions that force you to integrate, synthesize and analyze information that may occur in a number of different places. In Part I of this Series, we looked at the issue of questions that require you to pull together information from disparate places in a single course and make a decision based on that information. In this part of the Series (Part II), we will look at the issue of answering questions that require you to know information from both within and outside a course.

Take the example of the Proxy Server 2.0 exam. Proxy Server 2.0 is a product that requires IIS to run. As a consequence of the relationship between IIS and Proxy Server, you should be able to anticipate that a number of questions on the exam are going to test you on your knowledge of both Proxy Server and IIS. Let's look at a hypothetical scenario question.

As a consultant, you have been asked to troubleshoot a problem with access to the Proxy Server. Proxy Server 2.0 is installed on a Domain Controller in a trusting Domain of the accounts domain, where all the user accounts are located. Staff in the office use either Internet Explorer or Netscape. Full-time office staff have no difficulty getting out to the Internet through the proxy server using either browser. However, temporary office staff can use only Internet Explorer to browse the Internet. If any of the temporary staff use Netscape, they are denied access.

This scenario could go further by adding a number of different elements and providing more information, including irrelevant details that act as red herrings. But, imagine you are the consultant. How do you begin to solve this problem? First, looking at the security on IIS and Proxy Server 2.0 is a good place to start. You discover that anonymous connections to the Proxy Server are not allowed and that users need to authenticate to the Proxy server using either Basic Authentication or NT Challenge/Response.

Next, you need to consider the difference between IE and Netscape. IE supports both NT Challenge Response and Basic Authentication. However, Netscape supports only Basic Authentication, which means among other things that you are always prompted to log on when you try to access the Internet through the Proxy Server.

Here's another difference to consider. Basic Authentication requires the logon locally right in NT. That means users have the right to sit down at the console of a machine and log on to it. On a domain controller, domain users do not have this right by default. The administrator has to grant it. So, the solution to our problem has something to do with this right. For whatever reason, workstation restrictions or the granting of rights to temporary staff, the temporary staff does not have the ability to logon locally to the Proxy Server.

That's quite a bit of information you had to know to get you through a question based on this scenario. Unfortunately, the Proxy Server 2.0 course isn't going to be much help to you as a source of information--it doesn't discuss the issues surrounding Basic Authentication in any depth. That information can be found in the IIS course. However, the IIS 4.0 course may make no mention of the requirement for the logon locally right to support Basic Authentication. And, in the labs for the IIS and Proxy Server courses, you might miss this point because all the student machines are configured as stand-alone servers, which allow the logon locally right by default to all users. So, either you have to make this connection on your own or your instructor has to do it for you.

Although you have to know material from both the Proxy and the IIS courses, you also have to know material from other courses, such as the Administering NT, Core Technologies, and Enterprise courses. Would it be fair to ask you such a question on the Proxy Server exam? Absolutely. For two reasons: 1) the scenario-based question tests you on your ability to integrate and analyze information, and 2) the scenario is relevant and pertinent to supporting Proxy Server and falls within stated objectives of the exam goals. That the information to answer the question can't be found in the Proxy Server course is not relevant. To support Proxy Server, you need to already have a good understanding of IIS and NT.

To study for an exam such as Proxy Server, or any of the advanced MCSE electives, you will have to go outside the course to make sure you have an understanding of the applications and the OS that Proxy Server depends on. Just studying the course materials alone will leave you in poor shape to take the exam. And, as a general rule, you should always be prepared to study material outside the course that the exam is based on. Furthermore, if you are studying with the goal to memorize as much information as possible, you are probably not using your study time effectively--you have to make connections within the information you are absorbing, not just memorize it.

Part I of the Series
Part III of the Series
Part IV of the Series


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