How many paper in ocp certification
Table 1 describes the exams that this article covers, while Figure 2 helps you decide what exam to take next, assuming that you have passed a prior Java certification exam. Our article is designed to help you prepare for any of these three exams, all of which result in you being OCP 8 certified.
Figure 2 Java Exam prerequisites. There are some places on the exam where you need to know both an old way and a new way of doing things. When that happens, we will be sure to tell you what version of Java introduced which way. We will also let you know about topics that are not on the exam anymore, in case you see questions on them in the older free online mock exams. All you need to do to become an Oracle Certified Professional for Java 8 is to pass an exam!
Oracle has a tendency to fiddle with the length of the exam and the passing score once it comes out. The OCP exam has varied between 60 and 90 questions since it was first introduced.
The score to pass the exam has varied between 60 percent and 80 percent. The time allowed to take the exam has varied from two hours to two-and-a-half hours. Oracle has a tendency to tweak the exam objectives over time as well.
They do make minor additions and deletions from what is covered on the exam. For example, serialization has been added and removed from the objectives many times over the life of the OCP.
As of this writing, it is on the exam. Choose IT and then Oracle. Some testing centers are nice and professionally run. Others stick you in a closet with lots of people talking around you. At this time, you can reschedule the exam without penalty until up to 24 hours in advance.
Rescheduling is easy and can be done completely on the Pearson VUE website. This may change, so check the rules before paying. When you go to take the exam, remember to bring two forms of ID, including one that is government issued.
There is nothing better than real life experience. If you are attending any form of training from Oracle or an Oracle Partner, you will be provided with the ILT manuals, which are very good! Oracle consider the use of braindumps as cheating. If you are caught using them you will lose your OCP status. Don't use them if you care about your certification. Practice questions may help you with your exam technique, which in turn will help calm your nerves, but you should spend most of your time learning the material and practising using Oracle, not doing endless practice exams.
There is no point passing the exam if you have never used the product. Your lack of experience will stand out a mile. It's better than not having it, but I wouldn't count on it getting you a job if you have no experience.
Most employers still rate experience over certification. Of course, the ideal situation is to have both. The exams typically have questions to be answered in 90 minutes. They are multiple choice, often asking you to pick 2 of 5 answers, or 3 of 5. You will probably be asked about it a few times in the exam. Practice, as much as you can.
Use the new language features and the new APIs, and play with jShell. I highly recommend Jetbrains Academy. Once you think you have covered all exam requirements through readings and practice exercises, go to the next step: practice tests. I bought practice tests from two major providers, and both can help you, but I will recommend only Enthuware.
The other one had a silly bug when rendering questions that involve generics, making them impossible to understand, or worse, leading me to errors. In the Enthuware platform, go first through the topic related tests, then the easy and foundational ones. Once they are over, go to the actual practice tests, but leave the last day one for, well, the last day. I recommend one practice test per weekend in the last weeks of preparation. Study the most missed topics and review these notes as often as you can.
I also recommend using pen and paper, since it seems to work better for memory retention. David, I have been working with Oracle since version 5 and have weighed the certification process over the years. To be honest, I simply never had the time to certify.
If I did, I might do so. However, not having certification has never hurt my ability to find well-paying employment. In my opinion, certification matters more for consultants than it does for anyone else. If you already have a good deal of experience which it appears you do , the certification will not buy you much. Experience matters. Best to you, Andrew. My take is, it is invaluable for up to 3 years of experience. If done properly, the process forces you go to the corners of the subject which you otherwise would not get a chance.
It shows a degree of commitment. The emphasis reduces as the candidate is more experienced. The hands-on course requirement is silly though.
To my mind, it is sufficient if you have passed the exams. I personally take certification exams as validation of theoritical knowledge. I think sound theory is required to become a good practitioner. I think I benefited quite a bit in terms of subject knowledge and calls to the interviews. Bottom line, I dont have strong opinion one way or the other. I find no reason to have one. If you want an in depth knowledge of Oracle or just a refresher of things you might not use all the time, then why not.
It might even land you an interview or two. The problem with certifications and many other things these days is that if you spend a ton of time and money on them, in a couple of years you have to do it all over again for some new version.
Many times you can pick things up quickly if you know it well, but like all tests, there might be some questions you forget and have to at least refresh your memory to pass the certification test. Which means time spent and money spent on 11G, then 12, then 13 and so on.
Unless of course your company pays for a week of training every time a new version comes out to keep you up to date on the latest and greatest. If you have no certifications and want to refresh or gain more knowledge, go for it. But if you just do it expecting the end result to be a better job, you might be disappointed.
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