“It feels like I had a one-on-one personal trainer for passing the PMP.” – Haleh Rahimi, SCS learner
Hospital administrator Haleh Rahimi only had a basic understanding of what project management entailed when she started her first course at the School of Continuing Studies (SCS) just a couple of years ago. Now she has successfully completed the notoriously challenging Project Management Professional (PMP) exam.
While her natural affinity for project management was evident to her colleagues at Mount Sinai even before she began studying the subject, Rahimi credits her SCS Project Management certificate courses, and in particular the PMI® Authorized PMP® Exam Prep course, and instructor Peter Monkhouse with her success in earning her official PMP designation from the Project Management Institute.
“This course is so worth it,” she says. “It’s a professor-taught course where you are led through the modules and the exam application process, and like the other SCS project management courses, the modules are recorded so you can go back and review them at your convenience.”
Despite hearing how challenging the exam could be from friends and colleagues who had attempted it in the past, after taking the course and following Monkhouse’s advice, Rahimi says she felt ready to tackle it.
“I’ve heard roughly 30% of people who write it actually pass the exam. It’s very panic-inducing when you hear that but I had so much confidence that I wouldn’t have had trying to achieve this without the guidance Peter offered. He even looked over my resumé before I sent in my application,” she explains.
“It feels like I had a one-on-one personal trainer for passing the PMP.”
The SCS PMP prep course includes over 3000 up-to-date practice questions and 6 simulated PMP® practice exams, which learners have access to for 12 months.
When she submitted her exam, Rahimi says she felt confident. “I hadn’t run out of time, and the questions had been so familiar after doing the prep course mock exams. It was tricky but I knew how to apply the knowledge. So by the end, I just wanted to go lie down on my bed and do nothing for the rest of the day, but I felt good, she laughs.”
PMP hopefuls have the option to write online or in person, and Rahimi says that in addition to walking them through the application process, Monkhouse even gave her and her classmates advice on which option would suit their individual needs. “I wrote it in person at a test centre, and they give you your results on the spot. It’s very scary, but Peter had prepared us with advice on everything from what to expect on your 10-minute break to what kind of snacks to bring, so there were no stressful surprises,” she says.
“He even goes above and beyond and keeps a schedule of which of his students are writing when and he texted me in the morning to say good luck and to remind me that it wouldn’t be the end of the world if I didn’t pass the first time.”
Rahimi says she was thrilled to find that she had indeed passed. With just over a minute per question, her main concern in writing the exam was time management. “But Peter had taught us how to read the questions efficiently,” she explains.
“He told us not to write the exam until we were getting a particular percentage on the mock exam, without running out of time, and only when you can do that, are you ready to attempt the real thing.”
Rahimi’s first call after getting her passing result was to her father, a project management engineer. “He couldn’t believe it because he knows how hard the exam is. He has even had workers who were offered raises if they would go and get their PMP designation and they couldn’t do it.”
Rahimi plans to put her new certification to good use. “I love my job but I’m ready for a new challenge,” she says. “I knew I could have started applying for full-time roles after I completed my first three SCS courses, but when you do a little bit of research, everyone is talking about the PMP,” she says.
“Every time you see a project management-related job posting, it says the PMP designation will be a great asset to your application.”
Rahimi is now hoping to find a permanent project management role. She feels confident that by adding the PMP designation to her previous education and experience, she is now well-positioned to find her dream PM role within healthcare.
Given her experience, Rahimi says that her first piece of advice for anyone else hoping to pass the PMP exam is to take the PMI® Authorized PMP® Exam Prep course at SCS. “I kept in touch with a few people from my certificate courses and we checked in with each other after a few months to ask if anyone had done the PMP exam, and most of them had tried and failed,” she shares.
“The only one who had passed was a guy who had taken the SCS PMP prep course.”
“The only other advice I would give to anyone wanting to take the PMP exam would be that when the instructor tells you that you need to practice, take it seriously, because sitting down for four hours and answering practical questions is something you really need to prepare for,” Rahimi says.
It's a very tough exam, she emphasizes. “It would be so tough to do on your own, I would almost use the word impossible, but I feel like if you take the PMP prep course, follow the instructor’s guidance exactly, and commit to those invaluable mock exams, you will be successful.”