Study CAPM Requirement Quality and Prioritization: key concepts, common traps, and exam decision cues.
This chapter focuses on what makes requirements usable after they have been captured. CAPM usually tests whether you can distinguish behavior from quality conditions, recognize when a requirement is too vague to trust, and make real tradeoffs when not every requirement can be treated as equally urgent.
The exam usually does not reward generic statements such as “make requirements clear” or “prioritize by value.” It rewards whether you can classify the requirement correctly, tighten it until it is testable, and explain why one item should come earlier than another when value, risk, dependency, and control needs all compete.
Use these sections in order. Start with functional versus nonfunctional requirements, then move into requirement quality and testability, and finish with prioritization methods and tradeoffs.