Read chapter 1, lots of acronyms. Do any type quiz or of flash cards exist, by chapter, for the book online?
Unfortunately this industry has many many acronyms and a number of folks only talk in those acronyms. I am not sure if it is still done or not, but on exams, acronyms were always spelled out (such as: Data Loss Prevention (DLP) or Business Continuity Planning (BCP), etc.)
@tldutton Can you tell us if this is still the case?
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Thanks all, it dawned on me I have too niche of a want. I'm making an acronyms-by-chapter of the official study guide on quizlet.
@BrittneyWidmer The first time an acronym is used in the question part of the item, it is ALWAYS accompanied by its expansion; after that, you'll just see the acronym, even in the options (possible answers)
If the first place the acronym appears is in an option (possible answer), the acronym will ALWAYS be accompanied by an expansion and in every other option it appears in.
Absolutely no need to memorize acronyms.
I agree that the first time the acronym is used that it is spelled out.
I'm not so sure that I agree that memorizing acronyms is unnecessary.
For example: In question one it might state: Distributed Denial of Service Attack (DDOS) which would fit what you are saying. Then in question 125 might be a question about "DDOS."
If you don't know the acronym, then question 125 would be a challenge. Also in the real world, acronyms are widely used in conversation.
Just my thoughts.
Every question is handled individually, which means that if an acronym occurs in 10 exam items, its expanded in all 10 items.
Excellent point!
What if a question were posed such as:
What does the acronym CISSP designate?
a. Certified Information Systems Server Professional
b. Certified Information Systems Security Professional
c. Certified Information Systems Software Professional
I'm just thinking that it is not a bad idea to know and understand industry standard acronyms not only for the test, but for life beyond.