PMP Mock 5,6,7 and 12 Flashcards
All of the following are true about the project scope management plan EXCEPT:
A. It provides guidance on how project scope will be defined, documented, managed, and
controlled.
B. It provides guidance on how project scope will be verified.
C. It may be formal or informal, highly detailed, or broadly framed, based upon the needs of the
project.
D. It is separate from the project management plan.
D
Collect Requirements is the process of defining and documenting stakeholders’ needs to
meet the project objectives. All of the following are true about this process EXCEPT:
A. The project’s success is directly influenced by the care taken in capturing and managing
project and product requirements.
B. Requirements include the quantified and documented needs and expectations of the sponsor,
customer, and other stakeholders.
C. Requirements become the foundation of the WBS. Cost, schedule, and quality planning are all
built upon these requirements.
D. The development of requirements begins with an analysis of the information contained in the
risk register.
D
All of the following are true about the project scope statement EXCEPT:
A. It is an output of the Verify Scope process.
B. It describes, in detail, the project’s deliverables and the work required to create those
deliverables.
C. It provides a common understanding of the project scope among project stakeholders.
D. It may contain explicit scope exclusions that can assist in managing stakeholder expectations.
A
All of the following are true about the Control Scope process EXCEPT:
A. Control Scope is the process of monitoring the Status of the project and product scope and
managing changes to the scope baseline.
B. Project scope control is used to manage the actual changes when they occur and is integrated
with the other control processes.
C. Scope changes can be avoided by developing clear and concise specifications and enforcing
strict adherence to them.
D. Scope control includes determining the cause and degree of variance relative to the scope
baseline and deciding whether corrective or preventive action is required.
C
Which of the following statements is true about the work breakdown structure (WBS)?
A. The WBS is a deliverable-oriented hierarchical decomposition of the work to be executed by
the project team to accomplish the project objectives and create the required deliverables.
B. The WBS is an unstructured list of project activities in chart form.
C. The WBS is the same as the organizational breakdown structure (OBS).
D. The WBS is the bill of materials (BOM) needed to accomplish the project objectives and
create the required deliverables.
A
The following is an example of a constraint associated with the project scope that limits
the team’s options in scope definition:
A. A predefined budget.
B. The threat of a strike by a subcontractor.
C. Existing relationships with sellers, suppliers, or others in the supply chain.
D. The method used to measure project performance.
A
An input to the Define Scope process is: A. The type of contract detail language. B. Project Charter. C. Work breakdown structure (WBS). D. Decomposition.
B
What is the WBS typically used for?
A. To organize and define the total scope of the project.
B. To identify the logical person to be project sponsor.
C. To define the level of reporting that the seller provides the buyer.
D. As a record of when work elements are assigned to individuals.
A
The following is true about the WBS:
A. The WBS is another term for the bar (Gantt) chart.
B. Each descending level of the WBS represents an increasingly detailed definition of the project
work.
C. Work not in the WBS is usually defined in the scope statement of the project.
D. The WBS shows only the critical path activities.
B
An output of the Define Scope process is:
A. Work breakdown structure (WBS).
B. Resource breakdown structure (RBS).
C. Project scope statement.
D. Scope and schedule delays control plan.
C
Which of the following is true about the Verify Scope process?
A. It is the process of formalizing acceptance of the completed project deliverables,
B. Is not necessary if the project completes on time and within budget.
C. Occurs primarily when revisions or changes are made to project scope.
D. Scope verification is primarily concerned with correctness of the deliverables, while quality
control is primarily concerned with acceptance of the deliverables and meeting the quality
requirements specified for the deliverables.
A
Which of the following is not an output of the Control Scope process? A. Work performance measurements. B. Change requests. C. Project document updates. D. Accepted deliverables
D
The Project Time Management processes include:
A. Activity Definition, Activity Sequencing, Activity Execution, Activity Duration Estimation,
and Activity Control.
B. Define Activities, Sequence Activities, Estimate Activity Resources, Estimate Activity
Durations, Develop Schedule, and Control Schedule.
C. Identify Activities, Develop Schedule, Execute Activities, Control Activities, and Monitor
Schedule Results.
D. Determine Activities, Estimate Activity Durations, Develop Schedule, Implement Activities,
and Report Activity Results.
B
In rolling wave planning:
A. Focus is maintained on long-term objectives, allowing near-term objectives to be rolled out as
part of the ongoing wave of activities.
B. The work to be accomplished in the near term is planned in detail and future work is planned
at a higher level of the WBS.
C. The work far in the future is planned in detail for WBS components that are at a low level of
the WBS.
D. A wave of detailed activities is planned during strategic planning to ensure that WBS
deliverables and project milestones are achieved.
B
The precedence diagramming method (PDM):
A. Uses boxes or rectangles to represent activities. Therefore, it is also called activity-on-node
(AON).
B. Uses a probabilistic approach to scheduling project activities.
C. Is a time-phased graphical representation of the arrow diagramming method (ADM) and
shows durations of project activities as well as their dependencies.
D. Is more accurate than the critical path method for scheduling when there are uncertainties
about the durations of project activities.
A
The duration of the activity is affected by all of the following EXCEPT:
A. The estimated activity resource requirements.
B. The resources assigned to the activity.
C. The availability of the resources assigned to the activity.
D. Using the precedence diagramming method (PDM) for scheduling activities instead of using
the Critical Path Method (CPM).
D
The “fast tracking” method of schedule compression involves:
A. The use of industrial engineering techniques to improve productivity, thereby finishing the
project earlier than originally planned.
B. Performing in parallel activities that are normally performed in sequence, which may result in
rework and increased risk.
C. Going on a “mandatory overtime schedule” to complete the project on schedule or earlier if
possible.
D. Assigning “dedicated teams” to critical path activities to achieve project schedule objectives.
B
An example of a mandatory dependency, as opposed to a discretionary dependency, is:
A. Project A, the company’s participation in a pump industry trade show, depends on the
successful completion of Project B, which is building the prototype pump that is going to be
displayed.
B. To start design only after completion and approval of all project requirements.
C. For the shrink-wrapping on the finished box of software to depend on enclosing the manual
and software first.
D. To schedule the final testing activity of a new Computer model to start seventy-two hours
after the start of the mandatory seventy-two hour “burn-in” period.
C
Inputs to the Define Activities process are:
A. Work breakdown structure, project schedule, and network diagram.
B. Project schedule, progress reports, and change requests.
C. Project network diagram, constraints, and assumptions.
D. Schedule Management Plan, Scope baseline, enterprise environmental factors, and
organizational process assets.
D
A schedule compression technique to determine how to obtain the greatest amount of
compression for the least incremental cost is called:
A. Crashing.
B. Program evaluation and review technique (PERT).
C. Precedence diagramming method (PDM).
D. Fast tracking.
A
Bar charts show:
A. The level of effort for an activity.
B. Activity start and end dates, as well as expected durations.
C. Availability of resources assigned to perform project activities.
D. Relative priority of activities.
D
The precedence diagramming method (PDM) shows:
A. Various levels of the work breakdown structure.
B. Activities likely to be involved in project integration and resource allocation processes.
C. The logical relationships that exist between activities.
D. The project completion date based on normal resource availability.
C
The critical path is established by calculating the following dates:
A. Start-to-start, start-to-finish, finish-to-finish, finish-to-Start.
B. Early start, early finish, late start, late finish.
C. Predecessor-to-successor, predecessor-to-predecessor, successor-to-successor.
D. Primary-to-secondary, primary-to-finish, secondary-to-secondary, finish-to-finish.
B
All of the following are true about resource leveling EXCEPT:
A. It can be used to keep resource usage at a constant level during certain time periods.
B. It can often cause the original critical path to change.
C. It is used to optimize the distribution of work among resources.
D. It is used to develop a resource-based WBS.
D
The following is true about the critical chain:
A. It is a network scheduling technique that allows development of an optimum project schedule
when resources are unlimited.
B. It is a schedule network analysis technique that modifies the project schedule to account for
limited resources.
C. It is another name for the bar chart.
D. It is primarily used to ensure safety in major construction projects.
B
‘Crashing” in time management is:
A. A schedule compression technique that typically includes reducing schedule activity
durations and increasing the assignment of resources on schedule activities.
B. A schedule compression technique in which phases or activities that normally would be done
in sequence are performed in parallel.
C. The timely input of data to calculate the critical path.
D. Equivalent to minimizing float in the project schedule network.
A
All of the following choices represent inputs to the Estimate Activity Resources process
EXCEPT:
A. Activity list.
B. Enterprise environmental factors.
C. The actual resource cost of the last project.
D. Organizational process assets.
C
Output from the Estimate Activity Resources process includes:
A. Job descriptions of resources required for the project.
B. Salary schedules for various project human resources.
C. Identification of the types and quantities of resources required for each activity.
D. Analogous estimating of resource requirements.
D