Maybe so, it was one of the questions I missed.
ah yeah, it was $5.50-$40
luckily I'm only going for my diplomat diploma here and not an accounting one.
Maybe so, it was one of the questions I missed.
You're welcome. It seemed to be an intresting insight into what it takes to work at the State Department.
A diplomat's audience isn't really the same as a politician's though. Different tactics are neccessary. A politician's audience is large mass of people and the goal is to persuade 50%+1 of them. A diplomat's audience is a much smaller crowd and the goal is to persuade 100% of them.
Yeah, that currency question was poorly worded.
Is the first "320" the amount of dollars you have? Or the amount of foreign currency? And when they ask how much the "original" amount changed, are they also including the money you "spent" or not?
10. You spend 320.00 in a foreign currency while traveling. The exchange rate is 8.00 = $1.00. The next country you visit has an exchange rate of 12.00 = $1.00. You receive 66.00 of the next country's currency from a friend. How much has your original amount of money changed?
Edit: I'm re ed! It says so in the question. I kept reading "currency" as "country".![]()
Last edited by LnGrrrR; 02-09-2011 at 03:41 PM.
Also, I got 12 of 20. Good quiz.
good point.
not to mention, a politician's audience is usually fellow countrymen.
strongly stated opinions probably would just piss off foreign dignitaries
In that context it makes a lot more sense. They should probably have added it to the question though.![]()
Ouch...
I missed six. Some of my history isn't so hot.
LOL...
There were a few questions that you had to watch the wording on. Easy once you think about "exactly" what they are saying. Not assuming.
I missed the artist question, guessed the river. Didn't have a clue about the artist. The correct answer for the river would have been my second guess. Two questions with defined wording screwed me up because I didn't cheat, to look them up.
I think that the State dep't. exam is one of the most difficult in the government. The wording on some of these was puposely obtuse, I think, simply to see if the respondent could think through the issue.
The currency question was purposely awkward, I think.
The 'persuasive speech' question would have been familiar to anyone familiar with debate judging in high school or college.
I missed the one on the river from Germany to the Black Sea. Had no idea.
Guessed the volga but I was wrong.
Got the other 19 right mostly because I'm so old I lived through most of the events.
I've heard of a lot of folks a lot smarter than me who couldn't get through the State Department test. I think the CSM version is a "State Department Lite".
14 of 20. Couple of boneheaded misses, couple of lucky guesses. I was tripped up by some of the wording.
15 of 20. Missed some of the history ones and of course the art one.
You got 19 right?
As for the river, one just needs a familiarity with Stauss.
"An der Schoene Blaue Donau"
Yup. Only 60 questions though. Not too onerous. I would guess the other steps in the process would also weed out a few.
Well, yeah, but like I said, I lived through most of this stuff.
You know, I know about Strauss and the Blue Danube, but I didn't know it went to the black sea. So what I was thinking was "what river do I know is in Russia (black sea) so I came up with Volga. Totally wrong.
You may be right, but I would expect that whereas the CSM version asked about the House Ways and Means Committee as a test of an applicant's knowledge of the structure of the legislative process, the real test would ask something about some really obscure committee or sub-committee that funds state department issues.
I wonder what a passing score for this test is? A typical government job requires only 70%...
16 out of 20, but I missed that Fox and the Grapes question when I had no business getting it wrong.
So I really got 17 right, tbh :p
That currency question was worded oddly too.
EDIT: 60 questions in 40 minutes is the challenge, not the questions themselves. I think most people could get half of the questions right if they had a lot of time, but working through it on a time limit is all about how fast you decipher the information.
I think that's intentional, since a diplomat would likely encounter translation and cultural differences.
Seriously, that might be it. It was written like a bad translation haha
Why is the answer to this
thisWhich of the following is an example of extrinsic motivation?
and not thisAn actor gives a great performance in the hopes of winning an Academy Award.
?An activist gives a speech decrying an unfair act by his government.
What's the difference between the two?
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