Selecting The Right Cisco CCNA Training – Options
A Cisco training course is intended for individuals who wish to understand and work with routers and network switches. Routers join up networks of computers via the internet or dedicated lines. We’d recommend that you should start with the CCNA. It’s not advisable to launch directly into the CCNP as it’s a considerable step up – and you need to work up to it before you take this on.
You may end up employed by an internet service provider or a large commercial venture that is on many locations but needs to keep in touch. This specialised skill set is highly paid.
Should this be your first introduction to routers, then working up to and including the CCNA is definitely sufficient – avoid being talked into doing a CCNP. With a few years experience behind you, you will have a feel for if it’s appropriate for you to go to the level of CCNP.
One area often overlooked by new students considering a training program is the concept of ‘training segmentation’. Basically, this means the breakdown of the materials for timed release to you, which vastly changes where you end up.
Many companies enrol you into a program spread over 1-3 years, and send out each piece as you pass each exam. On the surface this seems reasonable – until you consider the following:
What if you don’t finish all the sections or exams? Maybe the prescribed order won’t suit you? Due to no fault of yours, you may go a little slower and therefore not end up with all the modules.
To avoid any potential future issues, it’s normal for most trainees to have all their training materials (which they’ve now paid for) delivered immediately, and not in stages. It’s then up to you in which order and at what speed you want to work.
A capable and professional consultant (in contrast with a salesperson) will ask questions and seek to comprehend your current experience level and abilities. This is paramount to calculating the starting point for your education.
Remember, if you’ve had any relevant previous certification, then you can sometimes expect to commence studying further along than someone who is new to the field.
It’s wise to consider user-skills and software training first. This can often make the transition to higher-level learning a much easier going.
Being at the forefront of revolutionary new technology is about as exciting as it can get. You become one of a team of people defining the world to come.
Technological changes and interaction through the web will dramatically change our lives in the near future; to a vast degree.
If making decent money is high on your list of priorities, then you will appreciate the fact that the income on average of a typical IT worker is considerably higher than salaries in the rest of the economy.
As the IT industry keeps growing year on year, it’s predictable that demand for professionally qualified and skilled IT workers will continue to boom for quite some time to come.
Students who consider this area of study are usually quite practically-minded, and aren’t really suited to the classroom environment, and struggling through thick study-volumes. If you’re thinking this sounds like you, go for more modern interactive training, with on-screen demonstrations and labs.
Research into the way we learn shows that long term memory is improved when we use all our senses, and we get physically involved with the study process.
Top of the range study programs now offer interactive CD and DVD ROM’s. Through instructor-led video classes you’ll find things easier to remember through their teaching and demonstrations. Knowledge can then be tested by utilising the practice lab’s and modules.
Be sure to get a look at some courseware examples from the school that you’re considering. The package should contain expert-led demonstrations, slideshows and virtual practice lab’s for your new skills.
Plump for physical media such as CD or DVD ROM’s every time. You’re then protected from broadband ‘downtime’ or slow-speeds.
(C) 2009 – S. Edwards. Navigate to Click HERE or CCNA Certification.






