9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

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Think Your Kid Is Smart? At Age 9, Girl in Pakistan Is a Microsoft Certified Professional

Gaining credentials as a Microsoft Certified Professional isn’t child’s play, but that hasn’t fazed 9-year-old Arfa Karim Randhawa, one of the world’s youngest MCPs.

REDMOND, Wash., May 2, 2005 — The Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP) credential is for technology professionals who have the skills to successfully implement a Microsoft product or technology as part of a business solution. At just 9 years old, Arfa Karim Randhawa , of Faisalabad, Pakistan, is one of the youngest MCPs in the world. She recently received her credentials from Emre Berkin, chairman of Microsoft’s Europe, Middle East and Africa region, and Jawwad Rehman, Microsoft’s country manager for Pakistan. Via e-mail, Randhawa recently discussed how the child of an agricultural family came to achieve this status and what it means to her and her family.

PressPass: When did you first become interested in computers?

Arfa: At the age of 5, when I was in kindergarten, I often used to pass by the computer labs and see students doing work on computers. I realized that calculation, which would take us a long time to do, can be done in less than a second with the help of computers. So that is how my interest in computers began. I started to explore computers on my own and first used one at the age of 6, when I was in first grade. Then I went to Applied Technologies (APTECH) for further studies.

PressPass: Why did you decide to pursue MCP certification?

Arfa: When I went to APTECH, my teachers, keeping in view my aim and age, decided that I should go for a certification of Microsoft. Because of my interest in software development, they decided that I should go for my MCP. It took me four months, and I did it during my summer vacation.

PressPass: What does it mean to you to receive this honor?

Arfa: It means a lot to me, because it helped me get recognition worldwide and to fulfill the dreams of my parents, especially my late grandfather, Ch. Abdul Karim Randhawa. I am thankful to Almighty Allah and my teachers, without whom I could not have achieved this honor. This is just the beginning.

PressPass: How have your family and friends reacted?

Arfa: The reaction of my family and friends was, naturally, very exciting. They are exhilarated and very much proud of me. My father provided me the opportunities, the required hardware, various software and the main thing, which is my confidence level.

I live in Faisalabad, a major industrial city of Pakistan. Faisalabad is called “Manchester of Pakistan,” and it is famous for its cloth industry. I belong to a purely agricultural family from a rural background. My late grandfather was an unlettered scholar and had a great passion for higher education for his next generation. My father is serving with a U.N. peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. My mother is a landlady and looks after the land affairs in the absence of my father. I have two younger brothers, named Sarmad and Dawood, ages 7 and 3, respectively. Prior to me, no one in my family is in the field of IT, but I can feel that my brothers are following my footsteps very anxiously and enthusiastically. They are posing a constant challenge to my world record.

PressPass: Have you ever visited America?

Arfa: I have not visited America as of now. However, I would love to come to the United States, for two reasons. Firstly, I would like to pay a visit to Disneyland. Secondly, I would like to meet Bill Gates.

PressPass: What are your impressions of Microsoft?

Arfa: Microsoft has changed the way people think about computers. Microsoft has laid down the foundations for next-generation computing and is the founder in terms of providing user-friendly software–thereby increasing the number of novice users. I like the way Microsoft participates in other-than-mainstream activities, such as academic research, charities, scholarships and connecting the disconnected by providing technology support to underserved people. Microsoft develops a lot of software that allows people to realize their potential. This is exactly what my experience is with Microsoft. I have a passion for software, and Microsoft provides me a true platform.

PressPass: Would you ever want to work at Microsoft?

Arfa: I would definitely like to work at Microsoft, since software development and exploring new technologies has always been my passion, and Microsoft is best when it comes to next-generation software technologies. Technology evangelism has always been my passion since I learned how to use computers. Not only I would like to work as the youngest technology evangelist at Microsoft, I would like to work on those cutting-edge technologies which would be explored by technology evangelists five years from now. Moreover, I would love to visit Microsoft headquarters at Redmond. I have dreamt a lot about the Redmond campus. I have visualized in my dreams so many times the working environment of Microsoft. I would like to see the labs where Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and the Microsoft .NET Framework have been developed.

PressPass: What other kinds of activities or hobbies do you enjoy?

Arfa: Computers, singing, reading, painting and gardening are my hobbies. I have won a singing competition at the national level. I keep my self updated by reading different books and encyclopedias.

PressPass: Do you have any advice for other young people?

Arfa: I have a message for the kids across the globe: If you want to do something big in your life, you must remember that shyness is only in the mind. If you think shy, you act shy. But if you think confident, you act confident. Therefore, never let shyness conquer your mind.

http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2005/may05/05-02YoungMCP.asp

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

old news

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

yah she was featured on Pakistan Link when she got her cert. Ratta zindabad :k:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

I am beginning to think these Microsoft exams are real easy.

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

ofcourse they are AJ. its all about Ratta. You really dont need to know what u memorized to pass them.

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

:ahaa:
5Abi yaar… no need for ratta either… Braindumps zindabad.

AJ it really depends on your intentions… if you just wanna get the cert as a credential for your portfolio, sirf dow din ki maar hai - pick up a book and some exam-cram materials and you’ll pass. I’m actually kinda guilty of doing it myself twice :smiley: but I had my reasons.

However, if you’re gonna hafta apply the skills at work, then you should setup a lab and practice as you learn stuff - this is how I did “Most” of my certs… setup a computer lab in the basement and play with stuff for a few months until I feel I’m ready to go for the exam. The most difficult ones out there have got to be the Sun Java Enterprise & Solaris Network Admin - took me a good 5 months of hard-core training to feel comfortable to pass the latter of the two. Still dreading the former.

ohh and yeah my youngest bro got his A+ certification at 10. That’s the same cert that the Circuit City & Best Buys of the world recognize as “techincal competency”. No big deal… dad got him a book to cram - and about 200 “sample” questions :slight_smile:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

Right, when you have braindumps you need to Rattafy the answers. How else will a 9-year old know the answers on braindump questions.

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

^ tru dat... yeah rattafying the book is still a lil more respectable I suppose...
ohh and the bulb was meant for ahmadjee.:D

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

:rotfl: Im with umar on braindumps :rotfl:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

I wanna do it too, but again I will go for cisco instead :snooty:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

yeh but you can't apply the same for CERTS from CISCO .. I mean, look at CCSP ... that baby is all loaded and challenging ...

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

its just a matter of time yaar nos…
when I did my CCNP, I was amongst the new ones and I had to really practice hard. Lekin abb tow mitti paleet ho gayi hai - you wanna do CCNP, you can clear the exam the next day if you want.

CCSP is relatively new right now - give it another two years.

Ciao.

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

Maybe I should get some certs too. Anyone wanna take the exams for me? :)

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

^ exam mey proxy?! :slight_smile: istaghfirullah…
not that we haven’t done it b4. In Pakistan, we had a guy proxy for another one in an A-Levels exam :hehe:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

^ yeh that’s nothing new … I was given a similar offer for CCNA … some guy would do the exam for me n’ I’ll get the cert. He asked for 40,000 rupees :eek: … khair … I said no n’ did it myself cause I wanted to learn … its a different story yaar …

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

yeh I hear you loud n clear bro … :slight_smile:

on a side note; I heard CISCO reviewed the CCSP exams n’ made 'em even difficult now :stuck_out_tongue: … khair …

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

already posted here 2 weeks ago:

http://www.paklinks.com/gs/showthread.php?t=180274

shall we redirect and merge these two?

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

cute girl btw; reminds me of my sister … I miss her … I miss buggin her :crying:

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

Yer talking to the editor of the original CCSP and CSSP books :o from Cisco (although they’re out of print now cuz of the newer versions of the exams sigh no more royalties) - they couldn’t have made the exams all that much harder content wise - just trickier questions etc.

Re: 9 year old Pakistani girl Microsoft Certified Pro

^ mashaAllah, mashaAllah ... I didn't know that ... zabardast ... I didn't even realise that we had so much talent on board :D ... Alhamdulillah :)