History, asked by shakuntaladhurua123, 5 hours ago

Is the number of certified myths​

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Answered by ds2125623
0

Answer:

please mark me brainliest

Explanation:

Myth #1: Certifications are Vendor-centric

This myth claims that the purpose of a certification is to "quantify a person's understanding of some of the functionality of a vendor's product" and that "whatever Vendor A says you should know is what you need to know in order to achieve validation." These are actually accurate statements misrepresented with negative connotations. In truth, no one group is better to develop a certification training program and exam measuring knowledge of a certain product than the vendor who created the product. Because almost every available technology has a vendor who designed or created the product, the developer is the best-qualified party to dictate the level of knowledge necessary for mastery. It is virtually impossible for any one party to have a baseline level of knowledge for every single technology out there. Equally impossible is to expect that every organization would use the same exact technological systems and require the same exact knowledge base. Differences in knowledge topics and levels contribute to healthy competition, as this is what distinguishes one potential candidate from another. Similarly, each organization is a completely separate and distinct entity from another – each requiring skill sets specific to certain functionalities it employs. It may be nice to wish that every exam should measure and be all things to all people – but this is just not possible… especially in a world where new technology needs and uses – for example, mobile content – are popping up daily.

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