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Timeline for Pluralsight SkillIQ Improved?

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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Oct 10, 2021 at 16:02 comment added Alex Howansky I took the PHP test recently and of the 18 questions, I gave negative feedback on 16 of them. 7 for "Not Relevant", 4 for "Technical Accuracy", and 5 for "Question Clarity." One of the questions had to do with knowing detail about some obscure 3rd party library I had never heard of. When I looked it up, it had been deprecated 8 years ago. A number of questions had opinion-based answers. Some had flat-out invalid source examples containing syntax errors. Some used the wrong words in very important places, like class instead of method. It was pretty terrible.
Oct 10, 2021 at 12:12 comment added Seif A. The screenshot above is for Working with Nodejs path. apparently, there's another older path called just "Nodejs" [ imgur.com/a/eNuckUn ] that has crypto content among others which is why you also found crypto questions
Oct 10, 2021 at 12:00 comment added Seif A. Not sure if you noticed this or not. But the SkillIQ questions are from the courses' questions banks associated with the topic's learning path on Pluralsight. So for Nodejs path [ imgur.com/a/PXQerPf ] the content of the courses is already about stuff like MongoDB, Sinon, OAuth, and others and how to use them in node. That's why you got the questions that you got, in case you're wondering.
Oct 8, 2021 at 9:54 comment added l4mpi So TL;DR it might no longer be the dumpster fire it was a few years ago, but is still absolutely unfit for evaluating the actual skill level? Sounds about right, I mean what else can you expect from a short web based quiz about a topic... and that's before we start talking about all of the meta problems with such a test (e.g. you can have your friend or google answer questions for you).
Oct 8, 2021 at 9:51 comment added Booga Roo As another side note: The PowerShell quiz was very basic at first but quickly delved into remote management protocol differences between Windows and Linux hosts. Basically the nuts and bolts underlying the cross platform compatibility. Somewhat esoteric but all 100% core to the tool.
Oct 8, 2021 at 9:48 comment added Benjamin Gruenbaum As a side note I just starting doing the JavaScript test next and it's a lot more decent so far.
Oct 8, 2021 at 9:42 history answered Benjamin Gruenbaum CC BY-SA 4.0