I'm an instructional designer at a community college working toward my CPI certification. I've been in adult education for about 8 years but most of my experience is in curriculum development rather than direct instruction, so the facilitation and delivery competencies feel less natural to me than the design side. I'm also not sure how much the exam tests specific learning theory names and frameworks vs applied judgment.
I started studying 4 weeks ago and I'm about 55% through the official study materials. My practice question scores are hovering around 69–73%. My exam is booked for 6 weeks from now, so I have time but I don't want to waste it on the wrong things.
The domains I'm least confident on are professional responsibility and the legal/ethical standards section. I keep second-guessing myself on those scenario questions – two answer choices often both seem reasonable. Is there a mental framework for approaching those that helps distinguish the best answer from a good answer?
I'm also wondering whether the exam emphasizes a specific instructional model like ADDIE or Kirkpatrick, or whether it's model-agnostic in how it frames questions.
Your 69–73% with 6 weeks left is a fine starting point. I went into my exam at 74% on practice tests and scored an 81% on the actual exam – the real thing was slightly more straightforward than some third-party practice questions I'd been using. Keep drilling and you'll be fine.
ADDIE and Kirkpatrick both appear but the exam doesn't expect you to be dogmatic about either. You need to know the stages and levels, be able to match an activity to the right phase, and understand evaluation at Levels 1–4. It's applied rather than theoretical.
The exam is heavily scenario-based – I'd estimate 65–70% of questions describe a situation and ask what the instructor should do. Pure recall questions are a minority. That format actually favors someone with real teaching experience, even if it's mostly indirect like yours.
For professional responsibility and ethics questions, the mental framework that helped me was: prioritize learner safety and dignity first, institutional compliance second, and instructor preference last. When two answers both seem okay, the one that centers learner welfare is almost always right.
That's a simplification but it held up on maybe 80% of those question types for me.
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