Does anyone know what exams I should take to take in order to get my MCSE in
Windows 2003 in the least amount of exams possible?
Thanks in Advance......
DarrylSmit wrote:
MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
11-Feb-08
Hi,
I currently have my MCSA in Windows 2000 and about to go and sit the 70-292
Exam. But iwas was also thinking about upgrading my MCSA to MCSE.
Does anyone know what exams I should take to take in order to get my MCSE in
Windows 2003 in the least amount of exams possible?
Thanks in advance,
Darryl
Previous Posts In This Thread:
On Monday, February 11, 2008 9:39 PM
DarrylSmit wrote:
MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
Hi,
I currently have my MCSA in Windows 2000 and about to go and sit the 70-292
Exam. But iwas was also thinking about upgrading my MCSA to MCSE.
Does anyone know what exams I should take to take in order to get my MCSE in
Windows 2003 in the least amount of exams possible?
Thanks in advance,
Darryl
On Monday, February 11, 2008 11:01 PM
John R wrote:
Re: MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
You'll only need 70-296 if you can get it in before the end of March 2008.
Otherwise, you will need both 70-293 and 70-294.
John R
On Monday, February 11, 2008 11:04 PM
John R wrote:
Re: MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
"Darryl Smith" <Darry...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:CBF81845-0816-4AD5...@microsoft.com...
The last post assumed you have MCSE 2000. If you do not, then you
definitely need 70-293 and 70-294, plus a design elective such as 70-297 or
70-298.
See this link for additional info...
http://www.microsoft.com/learning/mcp/mcse/windows2003/default.mspx
John R
On Tuesday, February 12, 2008 7:29 PM
DarrylSmit wrote:
OK ... I'm confused big-time now.I only have achieved the MCSA on Windows 2000.
OK ... I'm confused big-time now.
I only have achieved the MCSA on Windows 2000.
Keeping what you've said in mind, why does my Certification Planner only
mention that I need Exams 292, 293 and 294 to obtain my MCSE in Windows 2003?
There's no mention of a design unit.
"John R" wrote:
On Tuesday, February 12, 2008 9:48 PM
John R wrote:
Re: MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
"Darryl Smith" <Darry...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:39F71F50-23B5-49BA...@microsoft.com...
See this link...
http://www.microsoft.com/learning/mcp/mcse/windows2003/mcsa.mspx
We agree on 293 and 294 which are core elements. Your MCSA on 2000 will
satisfy the general elective for MCSE 2003. That leaves only the design
elective.
On the certification planner, it might not say 'design elective', it
probably says 'core elective' or something like that, but an MCSA has not
demonstrated design skills. If you look a little closer, I am sure you will
see 297 and 298 (and maybe a few others) of which you must satisfy one.
John R
On Tuesday, February 12, 2008 9:59 PM
John R wrote:
Re: MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
Assuming, of course, that you get 292 to bring your MCSA 2000 to MCSA 2003.
On Wednesday, February 13, 2008 5:19 AM
Rich G wrote:
Re: MCSA Win2K to MSCE Win2K3
I would not worry too much about the MCSE until you pass 70-292. It is
consider one of the most difficult exams to pass of them all..
Good luck with it.
Rich G
On Saturday, February 16, 2008 4:24 PM
squareeye wrote:
I was wondering if the 70-292 exam allowed the use of the calculator.
I was wondering if the 70-292 exam allowed the use of the calculator.
I am so lame I want it for the subneting questions.
By the way I have seen what a 200 MCSE needs to do to get 2008 equivalent
and the way I look at it it's exams for the 2003 MCSE upgrade then 3 exams
for the 2008 upgrade? That's 5 exams which I believe is what it takes to do
the 2008 Pro qualification from scratch. I'm not sure which approach is best
and even easier for me.
thanks
"Rich G" wrote:
On Monday, February 18, 2008 10:10 PM
mar wrote:
hiif your hold the MCSE and MCSA certifications, exam 70-292 will upgrade your
hi
if your hold the MCSE and MCSA certifications, exam 70-292 will upgrade your
MCSA 2000 to the MCSA 2003 Certification. Exams 70-292 and 296 will upgrade
your MCSE 2000 to the 2003 track. Be advised, exam 70-292 will only need to
be taken once for both certifications. So yes, there is an upgrade for the
MCSA Certification.
"Darryl Smith" wrote:
On Tuesday, February 19, 2008 9:07 PM
TK [MCSE,MCT] wrote:
I always recommend you go the Four Core Route.. Rather than the upgrades.
I always recommend you go the Four Core Route.. Rather than the upgrades.
There is an extremely LOW passing rate as far as the two upgrade exams go.
I recommend.. In order.. 290, 293, 294, 291, 298
On Thursday, February 21, 2008 2:49 PM
Montreal MCT wrote:
There is a calculator in the exam workstation. You may not bring your own in.
There is a calculator in the exam workstation. You may not bring your own
in.
M
--
Mitch Garvis, MCT
Microsoft MVP: Windows Server - Customer Experience
mi...@mitchgarvis.com
http://blog.mitchgarvis.com
"squareeyes" <squar...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:B62EF086-2063-459E...@microsoft.com...
Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
Global IT Talent Map
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials/aspnet/be618dce-75ab-49c0-8751-b445a09adc0c/global-it-talent-map.aspx
There are no options.
Your client OS exam from the MCSE2000 will meet the requirements for the
Client OS exam for MCSE2003.
You probably have an elective credit already met by one of the exams you've
taken.
That leaves the four core server exams (290, 291, 293, 294) and the design
exam (one of 297 or 298).
--
Lawrence Garvin, M.S., MCITP:EA, MCDBA, MCSA
Principal/CTO, Onsite Technology Solutions, Houston, Texas
Microsoft MVP - Software Distribution (2005-2009)
My Blog: http://onsitechsolutions.spaces.live.com
Microsoft WSUS Website: http://www.microsoft.com/wsus
My MVP Profile: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/profile/Lawrence.Garvin
Even though the requirements page only lists 70-297 or 70-298 as acceptable
for the design requirement, my cert planner still lists the retired design
exams 70-219, 70-220, 70-221, and 70-226 as acceptable for the design
requirement. If he has MCSE 2000, he probably has one of those, which would
leave him only the 4 core requirements.
John R.
>>> Does anyone know what exams I should take to take in order to get my
>>> MCSE in Windows 2003 in the least amount of exams possible?
>> Your client OS exam from the MCSE2000 will meet the requirements for the
>> Client OS exam for MCSE2003.
>>
>> You probably have an elective credit already met by one of the exams
>> you've taken.
>>
>> That leaves the four core server exams (290, 291, 293, 294) and the
>> design exam (one of 297 or 298).
> Even though the requirements page only lists 70-297 or 70-298 as
> acceptable for the design requirement, my cert planner still lists the
> retired design exams 70-219, 70-220, 70-221, and 70-226 as acceptable for
> the design requirement. If he has MCSE 2000, he probably has one of
> those, which would leave him only the 4 core requirements.
Interesting. Good Point. The Cert Requirements page doesn't list the Win2000
design options -- never has, to my knowledge -- but if the Cert Planner
shows them as acceptable then one should definitely plan that route.
Which really isn't hard anyway, assuming one takes the design exam after the
core exams. Merely taking the core exams will prove to be sufficient to have
earned the certification if it is.