Exam Guide for 1D0-420 CIW Site Designer
Note: The CIW Site Designer exam 1D0-420 was retired on June 30, 2006. The CIW v5 Site Designer exam 1D0-520 was released on November 30, 2005. Please see the Exam Guide page for exam 1D0-520. This page remains available for candidates who have already taken 1D0-420.
- Credit Toward Certification
- Prerequisites
- Exam Information
- Skills Measured
- Exam Preparation Tools
- Exam Retake Policy
- Exam Retirement
CREDIT TOWARD CERTIFICATION
Passing the CIW Site Designer exam is a requirement for the following CIW certifications:
- CIW Certified Instructor -- for those teaching CIW Site Designer content.
- Master CIW Web Site Manager.
- Master CIW Designer.
CIW Associates who pass the CIW Site Designer exam also earn the following CIW certification:
- CIW Professional.
PREREQUISITES
The following are required for candidates taking the CIW Site Designer exam:
- The CIW Certification Agreement is required for CIW certification eligibility. The candidate must submit this agreement after taking the exam by logging on as a CIW Candidate to the CIW Candidate Information Center. This agreement needs to be completed only once, but no CIW certification will be awarded without it, even if the candidate passes the exam.
- Earning the CIW Associate certificate by passing the CIW Foundations exam 1D0-410 or the CIW v5 Foundations exam 1D0-510 is required for those candidates to achieve CIW Professional, Master CIW Designer, and/or Master CIW Web Site Manager certification designation. Students may take the CIW Site Designer exam prior to the CIW Foundations exam; however, it is recommended that students take (and pass) these exams in sequential order.
EXAM INFORMATION
Students who have taken CIW courses are encouraged to continue their studies and apply their new skills before attempting the 1D0-420 Site Designer examination. Skills taught in the CIW Site Designer courses are best reinforced with real-world experience.
The candidate is responsible for learning the content and achieving a passing score on the CIW Site Designer exam. Comments regarding course delivery should be referred to the training company that delivered the course.
Any 1D0-420 CIW Site Designer exam taken on or after August 20, 2001 will be subject to the following:
- Each delivery of the exam will include 10 non-scored beta items, appearing randomly.
- The examination period will be increased from 75 minutes to 90 minutes.
| Exam Version | Date Published | Exam Notes |
| CIW Site Designer 1D0-420 | August 2001 | This version contains 10 non-scored beta items and 60 scored items. |
To achieve a passing score on the exam, candidates must:
- Correctly answer at least 45 of the 60 scored questions to achieve a total score of 75% or greater.
This scoring method does not apply to Site Designer examinations taken before August 20, 2001.
| Total Scored Items - randomly delivered | 60 |
| Beta items - randomly delivered throughout exam | 10 |
| Total Items | 70 |
Each item offers four answer choices (one correct answer and three distracters). Exam candidates must select the one best solution for each item.
SKILLS MEASURED
CIW Site Designer skills objectives are not product-specific or system-specific. The skills objectives are a combination of basic technical and non-technical skills and knowledge required for those interested in Web site development and design. The CIW Site Designer exam 1D0-420 tests the following common core of Internet skills:
- Explain and implement Web design concepts, including page layout, multimedia, font and color selection, graphic images, audience usability, file hierarchy, and navigation.
- Manage Web site development processes.
- Develop a Web strategy with goals and tactics to support it, and implement techniques such as mindmapping and site metaphor concepts.
- Select and implement basic Web technologies, such as HTML tables and frames, metadata, and Cascading Style Sheets.
- Use Web production applications and tools to create and manage pages and sites, create animated GIFs, edit graphic image files, and create multimedia files.
- Describe and implement advanced Web technologies, including scripting languages, Dynamic HTML, Extensible Markup Language (XML), server-side technologies, Java applets, and plug-ins.
- Describe the functions of Web servers, server administration ports, cookies, databases, and database management systems.
- Identify the Internet governing organizations.
- Research Internet standards and register a domain name.
- Complete development of a functional Web site.
- Compare in-house Web site hosting to hosting with an Internet Service Provider.
- Publish sites to the Web using various tools and techniques.
EXAM PREPARATION TOOLS
Official Curriculum
Instructor-Led Training
Practice Exam Sites
CIW does not endorse Web sites that list study guides or practice questions for CIW exams. All CIW examinations are copyrighted material. To maintain the security and value of our program, we reserve the right to decertify and/or prohibit from examinations any individuals who republish or distribute our copyrighted certification exam questions.
Official Practice Exams
Official CIW Online Practice Exams allow students and instructors to instantly evaluate the level of IT knowledge achieved. This tool provides students with an additional method of review and assessment to enhance the learning experience. It can also be used as a pre-assessment, practice exam and quiz administration tool to help instructors evaluate their students' knowledge.
Third-Party Practice Exams
Additional exam preparation tools are available from Self Test Software and MeasureUp, organizations that have developed practice tests to help candidates prepare for the Site Designer exam.
Third-Party Books, Web Sites, and Newsgroups
The following resources are provided as a supplement to your studies, and will reinforce the skills and concepts learned with CIW official Site Designer course materials.
- "Bugs," RichInStyle. http://www.richinstyle.com/bugs.
- Campbell, Bruce. Sams Teach Yourself Dynamic HTML in a Week.
- "Cascading Style Sheets, level 1: W3C Recommendation," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/.
- "Cascading Style Sheets, level 2: CSS2 Specification," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS - specs/.
- Chisholm, Wendy, Gregg Vanderheiden, and Ian Jacobs. W3C Recommendation: Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0. Cambridge, Mass.: World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT/.
- Connolly, Dan, Rohit Khare and Adam Rifkin. "The Evolution of Web Documents: The Ascent of XML," World Wide Web Journal, Special Issue on XML, Vol. 2, No. 4, Fall 1997, pp. 119-128. http://www.w3journal.com/xml/.
- "CSS Authoring Tools," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/ - editors.
- "CSS Master Compatibility Chart," WebReview.com. http://webreview.com/wr/pub/guides/style/mastergrid.html.
- "CSS1 Test Site," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/Test/.
- "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Recommendation," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-xml-19980210.
- Heinle, Nick. "Absolute Positioning with CSS in Web Coder," Web Review. http://www.webreview.com/97/06/27/coder/index.html.
- "HTML 4.1 Specification." World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/.
- "Microsoft Dominating Browser War," StatMarket, August 5, 1999. http://statmarket.com/SM?c=stat080599.
- Neilsen, Jakob. "Cost of User Testing a Website," Alertbox. http://www.useit.com/alertbox/980503.html.
- Neilsen, Jakob. "The Increasing Conservatism of Web Users," Alertbox. http://www.useit.com/alertbox/980322.html.
- Robie, Jonathan. "What is the Document Object Model?" World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-DOM-Level-1-19981001/introduction.html.
- Siegel, David. Creating Killer Web Sites, Second Edition. http://www.killersites.com/.
- St. Laurence, Simon. XML: A Primer. Foster City: MIS Press, 1998.
- Von Hagen, Bill. SGML For Dummies. Foster City: IDG Books Worldwide, 1997.
- "Working Draft: XML Linking Language (XLink)," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-xlink.
- "Working Draft: XML Pointer Language (XPointer)," World Wide Web Consortium. http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-xptr.
EXAM RETAKE POLICY
The CIW Exam Retake Policy outlines the conditions under which a candidate may retake a CIW exam. A waiting period between retakes of a single certification exam maintains the security of the exam and strengthens the value of the CIW certification. Each CIW exam is defined by a unique exam ID (e.g., IDO-410). A retake is any subsequent sitting of an exam with the same CIW exam ID by the same candidate at any authorized testing center.
In the event that a candidate passes a CIW exam, the candidate will not be allowed to retake that CIW exam. If the CIW exam objectives change, the exam ID will change to reflect the new exam version. Candidates who have passed an exam may sit a newer version of the exam that may have the same title but a different ID number.
In the event that a candidate fails a CIW exam on his or her first attempt, a 24-hour waiting period is required between the first and second sittings of that CIW exam. Candidates are required to wait for a period of no less than thirty (30) calendar days from the date of the previous sitting before any third or subsequent sitting of the same CIW exam.
Exams administered in any ways that do not comply with the CIW Exam Retake Policy shall be considered invalid and ineligible for a refund.
In the event that a candidate has violated this Exam Retake Policy, the candidate may be deemed ineligible to register for or schedule any CIW exam for a minimum period of twelve (12) months from the date of such determination.
In addition, any candidate determined to have violated the CIW Exam Retake Policy may be subject to any or all of the following:
- Denial of a specific CIW certification for a period of twelve (12) months from the date of such determination;
- Revocation of a specific CIW certification, if such certification had been previously granted to the candidate;
- Revocation of all CIW certifications previously granted to the candidate;
- Ineligibility to receive any CIW certification for a minimum of twelve (12) months from the date of such determination;
- Any other appropriate actions, including legal remedies, deemed necessary or appropriate to enforce the CIW Exam Retake Policy.
EXAM RETIREMENT
The CIW Site Designer exam 1D0-420 was retired on June 30, 2006. The CIW v5 Site Designer exam 1D0-520 was released on November 30, 2005.
COMMENTS
To make a comment or recommendation about CIW certification exams, please contact our CIW certification department.
