The Scaled Professional Scrum (SPS) with Nexus course is designed as an activity-based workshop where students develop a collection of skills that can be applied to overcome challenges when scaling Scrum.
The Scaled Professional Scrum (SPS) assessment is a SPS60-minute timeboxed assessment. You need to score over 85% to pass and gain the SPS certification. The assessment contains 40 questions in English of multiple choice type.
You decide when and where to take the assessment. You are not required to attend an assessment centre and can take it online from a location of your choosing. There is no expiration date once you have purchased the assessment attempt.
This practice test question bank provide you exactly the same format with the real exam for you to practice more and more.
During your journey, please feel free to contact me if any assistance is needed.
Based on my own experience passing the exam last month, I would like to give you some tips, hope they are useful for you.
Important tips when you are ready to take the assessment for real:
Have the Nexus Guide, Scrum Guide, Scrum Glossary and our Scrum 1 Pager to hand and use them to look up what you need.
Answer all the questions even if you have to make an educated guess. The assessment is not negatively marked.
Read the questions and answers carefully. One word misread can lead you to the wrong answer.
Don’t spend too long on each question. If unsure of an answer, note down the question number and move on. Completing all the questions in the timebox can be challenging.
Be aware of the difference between “must” (a mandatory thing) and “should” (an optional thing).
Make sure you select the required number of answers as the platform will not prompt you. Choosing only 1 answer on a “Pick 2” style question is a quick way to drop points.
Come back to the hard questions at the end and use your time to think them over.
Aim to leave time to check all your answers before the end.
Google the question if really unsure, but be careful as this takes time and there are lots of unreliable sources out there.