04-18-2023, 12:00 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-18-2023, 12:12 AM by TopHatWombat.)
I'm reporting my Davar Academy experience simply so that others can find it when they search, since I wasn't able to find a whole lot of recent such threads here on the forum.
I purchased the MAN-330 International Management course a few days ago. The only thing provided was a 104-slide PowerPoint deck in PDF format. They also provide a link to the digital edition of a Pearson textbook, which requires a $10/mo subscription at a minimum of four months. The previous edition of the same textbook, in hardback, was available on Amazon, in used condition, for $10-$15 from dozens of sellers. I did not purchase the textbook.
To study for the exam, I read half the PDF file yesterday, and the other half this morning. Then late in the afternoon, I read through the entire thing a second time. After that, I installed the RPNow secure browser, paid the $15 proctoring fee, did the room scan, and took the test.
The test itself consisted of 60 multiple choice questions and 10 short answer essay questions. Many of the the multiple choice questions were verbatim from the slide deck. There were maybe half a dozen questions that asked something about specific theories published by specific researchers, and these were not covered in the slide deck. I'm pretty certain I got every one of those questions wrong.
On the essay questions, I was absolutely clueless on 4 of the 10. But the essay questions are worth 4 points each, compared to 1 point each for the multiple choice questions, so it would have been stupid to leave them blank. So, I wrote the best answer I could with whatever context was provided in the question.
Despite the fact that I took the exam in the evening, it was graded within a few hours. That turn around speed surprised me. I received an email with my scores broken out for both the multiple choice section and the essay questions, and much to my surprise I scored higher on the essay questions than I did the multiple choice.
I should add that I have a lot of domestic small business experience, and have been deep in the TESU business core course for the last three weeks. So experience plus recent exposure to other business topics probably assisted here. If you're going to do a speed run through the core business subjects, they do start to reinforce each other by the end of that train.
After your exam is graded, send a transcript to your university by using the "Request" link in their navigation menu at the top of the website. It's not located inside the part of the side where you login. The first transcript they send is free, others are a small fee.
So that was how the Davar Academy process worked. Hopefully that is helpful to somebody else down the road that finds this post.
As for this particular exam, it was definitely challenging. Certainly the most difficult exam I've taken so far in the TESU business core sequence. I anticipated that, and intentionally saved it for near the end. That said, it's certainly doable. I'd suggest reading the provided slide deck multiple times over the course of a week, and maybe even purchasing the previous edition to the textbook and at least skimming through it.
I purchased the MAN-330 International Management course a few days ago. The only thing provided was a 104-slide PowerPoint deck in PDF format. They also provide a link to the digital edition of a Pearson textbook, which requires a $10/mo subscription at a minimum of four months. The previous edition of the same textbook, in hardback, was available on Amazon, in used condition, for $10-$15 from dozens of sellers. I did not purchase the textbook.
To study for the exam, I read half the PDF file yesterday, and the other half this morning. Then late in the afternoon, I read through the entire thing a second time. After that, I installed the RPNow secure browser, paid the $15 proctoring fee, did the room scan, and took the test.
The test itself consisted of 60 multiple choice questions and 10 short answer essay questions. Many of the the multiple choice questions were verbatim from the slide deck. There were maybe half a dozen questions that asked something about specific theories published by specific researchers, and these were not covered in the slide deck. I'm pretty certain I got every one of those questions wrong.
On the essay questions, I was absolutely clueless on 4 of the 10. But the essay questions are worth 4 points each, compared to 1 point each for the multiple choice questions, so it would have been stupid to leave them blank. So, I wrote the best answer I could with whatever context was provided in the question.
Despite the fact that I took the exam in the evening, it was graded within a few hours. That turn around speed surprised me. I received an email with my scores broken out for both the multiple choice section and the essay questions, and much to my surprise I scored higher on the essay questions than I did the multiple choice.
I should add that I have a lot of domestic small business experience, and have been deep in the TESU business core course for the last three weeks. So experience plus recent exposure to other business topics probably assisted here. If you're going to do a speed run through the core business subjects, they do start to reinforce each other by the end of that train.
After your exam is graded, send a transcript to your university by using the "Request" link in their navigation menu at the top of the website. It's not located inside the part of the side where you login. The first transcript they send is free, others are a small fee.
So that was how the Davar Academy process worked. Hopefully that is helpful to somebody else down the road that finds this post.
As for this particular exam, it was definitely challenging. Certainly the most difficult exam I've taken so far in the TESU business core sequence. I anticipated that, and intentionally saved it for near the end. That said, it's certainly doable. I'd suggest reading the provided slide deck multiple times over the course of a week, and maybe even purchasing the previous edition to the textbook and at least skimming through it.
In progress: TESU: BS CIS | Coursera: Google IT Support
Completed: TESU: BSAST Nuclear Engineering Technology (2004)
Completed: TESU: BSAST Nuclear Engineering Technology (2004)