20+ practice questions focused on Windows Administrative Tools — one of the most tested topics on the CompTIA A+ Core 2 220-1202 exam. Each question includes a detailed explanation so you learn why the right answer is correct.
Start Windows Administrative Tools PracticeA user reports that their Windows 10 PC is running slowly after they installed a new program. You need to identify which service or startup program is consuming the most CPU resources to troubleshoot the issue. Which administrative tool should you use?
Explanation: Task Manager provides real-time performance monitoring, including CPU usage per process. This makes it the ideal tool for quickly identifying resource hogs. Other tools like Event Viewer or Services.msc are for different purposes.
A security incident occurred where an unauthorized user gained access to a workstation. The security team needs to review detailed logs of all user logon attempts, including successful and failed logins, for the past 48 hours. Which administrative tool and specific log should you access to provide this information?
Explanation: Event Viewer's Windows Logs > Security log records all security-related events, including logon attempts (success and failure). This is the standard location for auditing user activity. Other logs like System or Application do not focus on authentication events.
During a software deployment, you need to configure a Windows 10 workstation to automatically start a legacy application every time a specific user logs on. Which tool should you use to add this startup entry for that user only?
Explanation: Task Manager's Startup tab allows you to manage per-user startup programs from a simple interface. For more control, you can also use the Startup folder or Registry, but Task Manager is the standard administrative tool for this task. Other tools like Services.msc or Group Policy are for system-wide or advanced configurations.
A customer reports that their Windows 11 PC is experiencing intermittent application crashes and you suspect file corruption. You need to run a system file check without using the full Windows interface. Which administrative tool can you launch from the Run dialog to open a command prompt with the necessary permissions?
Explanation: Running 'cmd' from the Run dialog opens a standard command prompt, but to run SFC with full access, you need to run it as Administrator. The correct approach is to type 'cmd' in the Run box and press Ctrl+Shift+Enter to launch as administrator, or use the Start menu. The question tests knowledge of how to access elevated command prompt. Other options like PowerShell or MSConfig are not the direct tool for this task.
After installing a new printer, a user reports that print jobs are stuck in the queue and cannot be deleted. You need to stop and restart the print spooler service to clear the queue. Which administrative tool allows you to manage this service?
Explanation: Services.msc (the Services console) is the tool for starting, stopping, and managing Windows services like the Print Spooler. It provides a graphical interface to control service status and startup type. Other tools like Task Manager or Event Viewer do not offer direct service management.
+15 more Windows Administrative Tools questions available
Practice all Windows Administrative Tools questions1. Baseline your knowledge
Start with 10 questions to gauge your current understanding of Windows Administrative Tools. This tells you whether you need a concept refresher or just practice.
2. Review every explanation
For each question — right or wrong — read the full explanation. Understanding why an answer is correct is more valuable than knowing the answer itself.
3. Focus on exam traps
Windows Administrative Tools questions on the 220-1202 frequently use trap wording. Look for subtle differences in answers that test your precision, not just general knowledge.
4. Reach 80% consistently
Do repeated sessions until you score 80%+ three times in a row. Then move to mixed-mode practice to test cross-topic recall under realistic conditions.
The exact number varies per candidate. Windows Administrative Tools is tested as part of the CompTIA A+ Core 2 220-1202 blueprint. Practicing with targeted Windows Administrative Tools questions ensures you can handle any format or difficulty that appears.
Yes. Courseiva provides free 220-1202 practice questions across all exam topics and domains. The platform includes topic-based practice, mock exams, missed-question review, bookmarked questions, and readiness tracking — no account required.
Difficulty is subjective, but Windows Administrative Tools is a high-priority exam concept tested in multiple ways — direct recall, scenario analysis, and command-output interpretation. Consistent practice is the best way to build confidence.
Launch a full Windows Administrative Tools practice session with instant scoring and detailed explanations.
Start Windows Administrative Tools Practice →