Deep dive: practice test for the LCA — tips from someone who almost failed it
The practice test section of the LCA nearly cost me my pass. I want to be specific about what tripped me up so others can avoid the same pitfalls.
The main issue: I understood the theory but struggled when questions presented real-world scenarios requiring judgment rather than recall. The LCA exam tests whether you can apply knowledge under ambiguous conditions, not just whether you've memorized the material.
The practice questions in the lca shell scripting & automation do a good job of simulating this. After working through them, I started recognizing patterns in how the exam phrases "select the best answer" versus "which is correct" — they're testing different things. I also found certified linux administrator helped me understand the reasoning behind answer choices, not just which one is correct.
Specific recommendation: if you're consistently getting 70% or below on study guide practice sets, don't move on until you understand why each wrong answer is wrong. That shift added about 12 percentage points to my scores over two weeks.
Good thread. One thing I'd add: don't try to cram the night before. I did 4 hours the night before my LCA and I think it hurt more than helped. Your brain needs consolidation time. Light review or full rest is better.
The part about reviewing wrong answers thoroughly is so underrated. Most people just move on after getting something wrong. Going back to understand the concept is what actually builds retention for the LCA. I also used certified linux administrator for the areas that kept coming up wrong — really helped cement the concepts.
The part about reviewing wrong answers thoroughly is so underrated. Most people just move on after getting something wrong. Going back to understand the concept is what actually builds retention for the LCA.
Coming back to this thread — just passed my LCA yesterday. Everything about the lca practice test section is accurate. For anyone still studying, the lca package management software installation was the closest thing to the real exam I found.
Honestly the thing that saved me second time was changing how I practiced. First attempt I just hammered question banks and memorized the answers, which felt productive but didn't teach me a thing. The LCA doesn't really test whether you remember the rule. It tests whether you can apply it when the scenario is messy and there's no obvious "correct" option staring back at you. So the second time I started forcing myself to explain out loud WHY each answer was right before I checked it, and if I couldn't justify it in plain words, I didn't actually understand it yet.
The other big shift was slowing down on the scenario questions. I used to panic and grab the first answer that sounded familiar. Big mistake. Now I read the whole thing, figure out what's actually being asked, then eliminate. You'd be surprised how often two answers look right but one ignores a detail buried in the prompt. Treat the practice test like the real exam, judgment first, recall second, and don't move on from a question you got wrong until you genuinely get why you missed it. That's the part I skipped the first time and it cost me.
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