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Summary

Contents

TOGAF 9.2 Foundation
1
Course Summary
PREVIEW54s
Course Summary
Difficulty
Beginner
Duration
1m
Students
14
Description

Course Description 

The last section offers a Mock Exam for you to prepare for taking the Foundation examination.  

Intended Audience  

This course is intended for anyone looking to understand Enterprise Architecture.  It is helpful however to have several years' experience in IT in a variety of roles, or to have an understanding of Enterprise or IT Architecture. 

Prerequisites of the Certifications 

There are no formal pre-requisites for this course.  

Feedback 

We welcome all feedback and suggestions - please contact us at qa.elearningadmin@qa.com to let us know what you think. 

Transcript

- So, that's the end of the TOGAF Foundation Course. So, what are the next steps? Well, you'll need to book in to do an official exam. You can book this through us at QA. Before you take the exam though, we've provided a mock exam for you to do online. The exam is comprised of 40 multiple choice questions, and you need a score of 22 or more to pass. The exam is timed too, to simulate an exam setting. Before you take the mock exam though, it's worth running through the knowledge checks for each module too. You'll be provided feedback on each question, so you can find the areas that you need to improve. Finally, we really appreciate any feedback you're able to provide us about the course. We'd love to know what you liked, and what we can improve on in the future. So from me, thank you very much and good luck.

About the Author

In a varied career that began in 1974, John Coleshaw has trodden a relatively unusual path whereby his roles have split evenly between Business and IT. In the early 80s he was the Credit Manager for a multi-national electronics company, and at the same time built a computerised financial and credit analysis tool using the original version of the IBM PC. In the mid-80s, whilst performing the role of senior underwriter in the Credit Insurance industry, he managed the IT system, as well as developed an innovative risk analysis tool. At the start of the 90s, as a manager in a financial information company, he developed an early form of expert system whose purpose was to predict corporate failure.

His current career as an IT trainer began in 1998, specialising at the time in Object Oriented programming languages. In 2002 he started developing and delivering IT Architecture training and has now had the opportunity to meet and discuss architecture matters with over a thousand architects. The courses he trains now span both The Open Group (TOGAF and ArchiMate), and BCS.

He has a book to his name, one written in the late 80s on Credit Risk Analysis.