It is true that the situational questions on the actual exam are more vague than the PrepCast test bank. That being said, what PrepCast teaches you is answer elimination. If you failed, I'm hoping it was only by a few questions. That being said, we need to work on how to think about situational questions and eliminate bad answer choices. Again, the PMP exam is famous for making you pick an answer that is the least-worst answer which makes you feel like you aren't getting the answers right.
Here is how I helped another student think about situational questions:
www.project-management-prepcast.com/kune...tual-pmi-sample-test
Eliminate answers that procrastinate, delay, escalate (for no good reason). Looks for answers that are proactive.
I also have another post on Reddit which shows how to think about these situational questions. Message me if you want some other examples of made-up questions.
This should sound familiar from the exam you just took:
A project has blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. What is the best course of action for the Project Manager?
A. Wait till resources are available.
B. Escalate to project manager.
C. Do data analysis.
D. Discuss a workaround with the team.
Which one would you pick? A just delays the project. B - PMs don't communicate just to communicate. Plus what does the accomplish? C is analysis paralysis. D. Is proactive, uses brainstorming and moves the project forward.
Unless you get a "simpler" test from the test bank, the ability to answer these situational questions are the key to passing. If you have any other questions or comments, let me know.
Hope this helps.