Pmi Acp Study Guide

15.10.2019

If you ever wanted a reliable source for useful and valuable content for PMI-ACP, look no further. Our PMI-ACP Test Questions and Answers study guide has everything you need to start preparing for your PMI-ACP test. The PMI-ACP Test Questions and Answers study package includes real questions and answers from the actula PMI-ACP test or exam by PMP - PMI and it guarantees passing your success. The aim of this PMI-ACP Test Questions study package is to provide enough information so you can easily pass your test in first attempt. This PMI-ACP Study Package Contains:. PMI-ACP PDF (eBook) version of the Questions and Answers.

Free PMI-ACP ® Study Guide. The content of this study guide provides references to the knowledge areas outlined in the PMI-ACP Examination Content Outline. Although this Guide is not an all-inclusive tool for exam preparation, it addresses many of the key topics covered in the test preparation reference materials suggested by PMI as well as. A list of PMI-ACP Study Guides for the PMI-ACP Certification (Agile Certified Practitioner) exam prep. The PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP)® formally recognizes your knowledge of agile principles and your skill with agile techniques.

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Perhaps one of the most useful reference materials for the PMI-ACP® exam is sample exam questions. Here is a collection of the best PMI-ACP® sample exam questions found on the internet. The best part is many of these sample exams are free.

Hi Edward, just checking in to say thanks for the mock exam link list and the other resources on your website. I passed the PMI-ACP today and your website helped me do it. Here’s a quick wrap-up of how it went for me, maybe it’s interesting for some other folks. This is from March 2018, just before the change of the exam content outline. My background: — Seven years of Product Management and Project Management in different companies, about half of it in scrum teams.

I never once saw a “plain vanilla” implementation of scrum or Kanban; it was always half-tailored, half-improvised. Some exposure to classical waterfall / PMP project management as well. Preparation: — – I attended three agile group trainings in my current company over the past three years, 6 days all in all. The last training was specifically focusing on the 21 contact hours required by PMI for the ACP (three days). – After taking a couple weeks pondering whether to go for the exam I decided to do it and mostly prepared with Mike Griffith’s PMI-ACP Exam Prep book which I can recommend. – I read it once from start to finish, added some bookmarks and prepared some flashcards in the process and then put it all to the side for a bit.

– Picked it up again after a month or two and did all the test exams at the end of the chapters to find out where I stand. – Had about 15 out of 20 correct answers in each chapter and went back over all the weak areas, summarizing more concepts on flash cards, adding more bookmarks. – Started doing a couple online mock exams, spending most of the time reviewing the questions where I felt insecure.

I did that by searching through keywords in the index of Mike’s book and jumping into the relevant chapters from there. More flashcards and two pages of paper summaries. – Did all the exercises in the book which I had entirely skipped during my first sitting. – Did the online mock exam that comes as bonus content with the book (60 questions on the rlcms website). That was one of the best ones. Did a very thorough review on those questions/answers. – Reviewed a couple concepts online that I didn’t entirely understand from the book (those included Product vs.

Story mapping, EVM, Little’s Law, Value-based decomposition and a few others. The book is great but for some of the topics I needed more context to actually understand how they are applied. I still felt uneasy about several aspects of those concepts when I attended the exam because my knowledge on the topics felt just too shallow). – In the end I had 50 flash cards because I remember stuff through writing. But the only things I really learned “by heart” were the Agile Manifesto, 3 Scrum Pillars, 12 Agile Principles, 7 wastes of lean and a couple others. Turned out nearly none of this was directly asked for in the exam though.

– All in all I spent a couple weeks with the book to read it in the evenings (interesting stuff!) and then around three full weekends on really working through the parts where I felt weak (tough stuff!). I think I read somewhere that 50 to 60 hours preparation time are necessary, and I think I might even have used a little more. I scheduled the test on the last possible date before the change of the exam content outline 🙂 The Exam: — The Exam was really weird I must say, and I’m not sure what to think of it.

It felt very difficult right from the start and got a little easier towards the third quarter, but to me it was tough to cope with the three hours and the ticking clock in the corner of the screen. There were exclusively situational questions and most of them felt ambiguous. In many cases it was easy to cross out two options but nearly impossible to decide between the remaining two. However, there were only three questions where I really had no clue at all – still, the entire time I was unsure whether I would pass, but especially the first half felt really demotivational.

The strange part about it is that I didn’t only pass, but got the “above target” grade on every single one of the seven domains. It feels like there’s either something strange with my perception or something strange with how this test is designed. That being said, I have very little experience with computer based tests because they’re not so common in the German school/uni system, and the fact that English is my second language certainly required additional resources in trying to exactly decipher the questions. I guess the hardest part here is to really understand all questions well enough to picture each situation, while not missing any details or keywords (who’s acting, what’s the context, which clues might the actors mention?). I felt the urge to read them all out loud to myself, but of course I was not alone in the room A typical question would go something like this (made up nonsense example): “A new member has joined an agile team and is afraid to share his thoughts on a new architecture proposal brought forward by a more senior developer.

In the middle of the following six-week sprint, the customer announces a change in plans that would uncover considerable technical debt. Hello All, Just want to share the good news that i cleared PMI ACP in my first attempt today. Thank you Edward for the inputs, suggestions, tip and tricks that you provided here. It was so helpful and can’t thank you enough.

It took me longer than expected( 5 months0 to prepare and clear the examination as i was studying between the time i was getting managing work and family but i kept going even when i only had 15 mins in a day to prepare. The paid mock tests difficulty level was too high which really helped me to understand where i was going wrong.

These are sold as is! The one with stickers on it has been ridden far less than the other. Murray mini bike manual. However the more used one is a little faster. Im sure the other one could be adjusted to run the same.

Good luck to all the future PMI ACP aspirants. May the force be with you. Thanks, Sachin. Hello Edward, Any thought if we need to understand these terms/topics as below? As far as I knew, these topics/terms are not described in Mike Griffiths/RMC’s Exam Prep for PMI-ACP.

Thanks for your comment. After going through your list, I would say that some of the concepts are actually included in Mike Griffiths/RMC’s Exam Prep for PMI-ACP (e.g. CARVER, DRY, etc.) while some are included in the PMBOK Guide (should have come across if you have attempted the PMP Exam). The rest maybe some more forward-thinking Agile principles that have not been mentioned in PMI-ACP exam prep books. As there isn’t a concrete/detailed syllabus for the PMI-ACP Exam, I cannot tell whether some or all of these terms are needed. But from my PMI-ACP Exam experience, Mike Griffiths’s PMI-ACP Exam Prep book should be sufficient for passing the exam 😛 Wish you PMI-ACP success!

Took (and passed) the PMI-ACP exam today. Out of the list of resources above only Mike Griffiths’ stuff is pertinent IMO. The other free tests linked focus too narrowly on a particular method – like XP – but the ACP exam is about the ideas and methods behind agile as they pertain to project management not the specific process of scrum, crystal, XP etc.

I used the Agile course from Learnsmart and that was prep enough. If you have the money and are keen I would recommend Mike’s stuff as it gives a good idea of the type of questions (and how ambiguous thrust can be) in the test. Hi Edward, As requested, here are some of my recollection of the exam. 1) I was surprised to find questions around Sponsor; Higher Management; Functional Leader, where as many of the mock questions only talk about Customer, Product Owner and Scrum Master or Agile Practitioner. Therefore, I would be good for potential candidates to also look for the aforesaid roles influence from Agile perspective and how an Agile Practitioner is support to interact with them on top of Product Owner. There was a question on ‘Done’ and whom should an Agile lead should reconcile a ‘Done’ product increment. The options included Customer: Product Owner; Both and Sponsor.

So I hope people would get the gist what I am talking about. 2) There were only 2 questions based on graphs of burndown charts, very simple to interpret but options were confusing. Like is the iteration behind or ahead or is the iteration under jeopardy, so people need to be very clear that ‘behind’ is more specific than jeopardy. 3) There many questions around role of ‘teams’, such as: when a team member does not cooperate, what should Agile lead do? When a team member lacks technical skills; when a team member does not openly share info.; when a team member has expert knowledge (SME); etc. So it is good to practice questions around team dynamics and what would be then best course of action for the Agile lead. If one concentrates on the above topics in details, I reckon they would be in good shape to pass the exam.

Edward, I am currently taking the PMTraining mock exams and I think the questions are pretty basic and not formatted at a professional level. They look like they are worded by a school kid. I may be sounding overly critical, but compared to PM Exam Simulator I used for PMP mocks, these look amateurish. Also, in the same 40 question exam, sometimes 4-5 questions are similar. I am now little hesitant to go into the real exam, though I am consistently scoring above 80%.

Any suggestions? Regards, Srinivas Nalla. Hi Srinivas, Glad to receive your comment. I would say if you have understood and remembered all the materials in the Agile PrepCast plus you have tried a number of mock exam questions and passed with over 70%, you are almost set to pass the PMI-ACP exam in first try.

At the time of my PMI-ACP preparation, I was a bit nervous and purchased the book by Mike Griffiths ( ) which is considered the “textbook” for the PMI-ACP exam. If you are less confident about passing the exam in first try, you are advised to read that book too. I finished the book together with all the questions within a few days only and you still have plenty of time to prepare for the exam. Wish you PMI-ACP success! Thanks for your email.

From your mock exam results, you stand a high chance of passing the PMI-ACP Exam! However, recent PMI-ACP candidates have expressed that most of the questions in the real PMI-ACP Exam are situational questions (i.e.

Presenting a situation and asking you to select the best/most logical action). For the time being, I would highly advise you to understand the questions you have got wrong, especially the iZenbridge questions. If you can master those questions, you should be able to pass the real exam! Wish you PMI-ACP success! I attended Simplilearn for my 21 contact hours. The course and sample questions are more on theory.

In real PMI-ACP Exam (which I just passed today), it is testing you about 90% application/scenario-based. In Simplilearn, they give you 5 sample exam questions. That is 120 question. 5 = 600 questions.

And none of these sample questions shown in real PMI-ACP exam. However, with the “theory” from Simplilearn course, and your real agile project management experience, it is not a problem to take this PMI-ACP exam. Hi, thanks for this collection of exam question links.

I passed my PMI-ACP at the end of October 2015, and I must say the exam I took had NO resemblance whatsoever to the practice questions you can find online. Everything you find online tests you on your knowledge of facts. The PMI-ACP has changed.

All of the questions (except fpr two about two burn-down charts) were scenario questions: “Here’s a situation, what do you do?” and most of the time two of the choices were equally plausible, and NOT what I would do in real life. I really had to concentrate on what I knew about Agile processes and tools, and how they applied to the given situation. Instead if testing you on your knowledge of facts, the exam ASSUMES you already know the facts and instead tests you on the APPLICATION of those facts to real situations. This took me by surprise, and while I finished the exam in 1.5 hours, I used the full 3 hours to complete it, changing maybe 15 of my answers as I went through the exam repeatedly. In the end I passed with two “above proficient” areas with the rest “proficient”, which pleased me — that was better than I did on my PMP exam in 2009. I recommend to anyone about to take the exam: Get up-to-date study materials.

Yes, it helps to do the practice questions online, but understand that the actual exam will test you on scenarios. I have been studying for the exam for a while, training material from the class I took, your website and one other book I bought.

Pmi Acp Study Guide

I have been practicing for weeks now and do really well on the exams provided in the materials I mentioned above. But any time I try to take another sample exam that’s new, I don’t do very well. Seems like as if I haven’t covered all aspects of the exam during my studies. I already have the exam scheduled for next week and I am very nervous about what to do. Many of these websites seem to claim that their simulation tests are enough to study for the exam.

Pmi Acp Study Materials

In your expert opinion what should I do? Hi Maria, Don’t worry too much. Agile is such a broad topic that the sample exams on the market will cover a lot of topics we haven’t dealt with during our studies. I was quite nervous before the exam too. In my experience, the real PMI-ACP exam is a bit less difficult than most practice exams. If you can do well in the training materials and the reference book, that should be sufficient.

During my last week of study, I read through my notes and did just a few practice exams. I tried to refresh my mind by having more rests. Don’t worry, if you have worked hard, you will pass the PMI-ACP exam! Wish you PMI-ACP exam success! Hi Jacob, Thanks for letting me know is no longer available, I have removed it from the list. For paid PMI-ACP exams, I highly recommend the following: The questions included in the book “PMI-ACP Exam Prep” by Mike Griffiths The questions included in the book “The PMI-ACP Exam: How to Pass on Your First Try” by Andy Crowe The real PMI-ACP exam questions are on par with the difficulties of these exams. If you can get around 70%+ correct, you can pass the PMI-ACP Exam easily.

I have also tried the paid online exam at but this is not quite good in fact. Wish you PMI-ACP success! Hi, my name is Edward Chung, PMP®, PMI-ACP®, ITIL® v3 Foundation. Like most of us, I am a working professional pursuing career advancements through Certifications. As I am having a full-time job and a family with 3 kids, I need to pursue professional certifications in the most effective way (i.e. With the least amount of time).

I share my exam tips here in the hope of helping fellow Certification aspirants! If you have any queries, I am more than happy to help. Please OR leave your queries in the comment section. I promise to attend to them asap. Wish you certification success! (last name: Chung, first name: Chi Wing).

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