M886: Exam Done!
Posted in Information Security on April 22nd, 2009 by admin – Comments OffI cannot believe it, this course is now behind me. The exam took place this afternoon … and it went well. It is the first time I am so confident when leaving the exam centre. I hope the mark will not hit me hard after such statement!
The exam
This exam is in 2 parts:
- Part 1 is 16 questions about the whole course work, the set book, the standard and also some technical background paper you can download as part of the course resources on the web site.
This part is worth 40% of the mark. Nothing traitorous, just the course. - Question 17 is actually Part 2. It is worth 60% of the total mark.
The principle seems simple: You choose a theme, you find 2 or 3 peer reviewed papers on the theme. On the day of the exam, without notes, you have to be able to give the references of the papers, explain why you chose this theme and how they are relevant. You need to be able to summarise them, compare, criticise them, etc. This was pretty scary at the start.
I would advise to refer to the exam preparation booklet for more details.
A few tips to prepare for it.
- My first tip is not revolutionary, you have to work all year.
- Second: There is a revision week-end, attend it!
I know it costs around £250 but the one I attended was worth every penny especially when we reached the subject of Part 2 of the exam. - Use the OU library to find the papers.
My recipe for part 2
I quickly decided that 3 papers was too ambitious, too much to remember and too long for the exam. It proved right for me as I finished just 5 minutes before the 3 hours allocated.
I chose 2 papers presented at the same conference this made the comparison easier. I will update this article after I have received my results to see if it was OK.
I summarised both papers using mind maps (A thank you to Adrian who introduced me to a free mind map app called freemind). I built my summaries from the top level items of the mind map. I kept those maps handy all along my study.
I did more research on the subject, I found further papers which I kept as references. I find remembering these references very difficult.
When I felt ready, I answered part 2 at home and timed it. I was quite lucky as my timing was not too bad at my first attempt. For this attempt, I had all my notes and mind maps.
I kept reading my papers again and again and tried to get more background.
I recorded my first attempt at part 2 and loaded it on my Ipod so I could listen to it at will (I used Audacity, a free, open source software for recording and editing sounds). Apart from discovering how strong my French accent is, it worked well to memorise it.
Last week-end, I had a second go at part 2, without my notes this time. This second attempt did not give exactly the first text as the first attempt but it was a pleasing result.
At this point I stopped. I sometimes had a quick look at my mindmaps to remember some details of the papers.
This morning about three hours before the exam, I realised that I could read most of my Part 2 in my mind! Miracle or work?
Exam Part 1
For this I relied on my notes during the revision week-end, the sample questions in the exam prep booklet and a set of questions given to us at the revision week-end. Don’t count on previous exam papers, the course team has decided not to release them! I guess there are only a few ways to ask you what you think of confidentiality, integrity and availability!
I produced a high level mind map of ISO27002 to force me to read it.
Following this there was only one 2 marks question I could not takle.
In summary
Writing to my blog I realised that that the exam prep was quite an effort.
Perhaps the best tip: Look at the exam prep document early in the course and try to find a relevant subject. That will give you more time and flexibility.
I hope this will be of any use.
I will sleep well tonight.
Ciao