Sunday, July 5, 2009

Computer Training - CompTIA Clarified

By Jason Kendall

CompTIA A + has a total of four exams and specialised sectors, but you only have to achieve certification in two for qualification purposes. This is why most training colleges restrict their course to just 2 areas. Yet learning about all 4 will give you a far deeper level of understanding of your subject, something you'll discover is vital in professional employment.

Courses in A+ computer training teach diagnostic techniques and fault-finding - via hands on and remote access, as well as building and fixing and understanding antistatic conditions. Should you be thinking of maintaining networks, you'll need to add Network+ to your A+ course. This qualification will enable you to assist you greatly in the job market. You may also want to consider the networking qualifications from Microsoft, i.e. MCP, MCSA MCSE.

Usually, your normal student doesn't know where to start with IT, or even which area to focus their retraining program on. Since without any solid background in the IT industry, how can most of us be expected to understand what anyone doing a particular job actually does? To get through to the essence of this, a discussion is necessary, covering several definitive areas:

* Your hobbies and interests - often these point towards what things will provide a happy working life.

* For what reasons you're moving into computing - it could be you're looking to overcome a long-held goal such as working for yourself maybe.

* What priority do you place on job satisfaction vs salary?

* Always think in-depth about the level of commitment required to attain their desired level.

* Having a good look at the level of commitment, time and effort that you're going to put into it.

To be honest, your only option to investigate these matters is via a conversation with an advisor or professional that understands the IT industry (and chiefly the commercial requirements.)

One interesting way that training providers make more money is through up-front charges for exams and presenting it as a guarantee for your exams. It looks like a good deal, but let's just examine it more closely:

You're paying for it ultimately. One thing's for sure - it isn't free - it's simply been shoe-horned into the price as a whole. It's everybody's ambition to qualify on the first attempt. Going for exams in order and funding them one at a time makes it far more likely you'll pass first time - you put the effort in and are mindful of the investment you've made.

Do the examinations somewhere close to home and find the best deal for you at the time. Is there a good reason to pay interest on a bigger loan than is necessary because you've paid early for examination fees when there was no need to? A lot of profit is secured by training companies charging all their exam fees up-front - and hoping either that you won't take them, or it will be a long time before you do. In addition to this, you should consider what an 'exam guarantee' really means. Many training companies will not pay again for an exam until you have demonstrated conclusively that you won't fail again.

Exam fees averaged approximately 112 pounds twelve months or so ago through Prometric or VUE centres around the United Kingdom. So don't be talked into shelling out hundreds or thousands of pounds more to get 'Exam Guarantees', when common sense dictates that what's really needed is a commitment to studying and the use of authorised exam preparation tools.

If you're like many of the students we talk to then you probably enjoy fairly practical work - the 'hands-on' individual. If you're like us, the world of book-reading and classrooms would be considered as a last resort, but it doesn't suit your way of doing things. So look for on-screen interactive learning packages if books just don't do it for you. Research has time and time again demonstrated that connecting physically with our study, is proven to produce longer-lasting and deeper memory retention.

Interactive audio-visual materials involving demonstration and virtual lab's will beat books every time. And you'll find them fun and interesting. It would be silly not to view some of the typical study materials provided before you hand over your cheque. You should expect instructor-led video demonstrations and a variety of audio-visual and interactive sections.

It's folly to go for purely on-line training. With highly variable reliability and quality from the ISP (internet service provider) market, make sure you get CD or DVD ROM based materials.

Can job security really exist anywhere now? Here in the UK, with businesses changing their mind whenever it suits, we'd question whether it does. We could however locate security at market-level, by digging for areas that have high demand, together with shortages of trained staff.

The IT skills shortfall in the UK currently stands at approximately 26 percent, as reported by the 2006 e-Skills analysis. Basically, we're only able to fill just 3 out of 4 positions in Information Technology (IT). Fully taught and commercially certified new employees are as a result at a total premium, and it's estimated to remain so for many years to come. Surely, now really is the very best time for retraining into the IT industry.

Students will sometimes miss checking on a painfully important area - the way the company actually breaks down and delivers the courseware sections, and into what particular chunks. Delivery by courier of each element one stage at a time, as you pass each exam is the typical way that your program will arrive. While seeming sensible, you must understand the following: How would they react if you didn't complete each and every exam at the proposed pace? Often the staged order doesn't work as well as some other order of studying might.

In all honesty, the very best answer is to have a copy of their prescribed order of study, but get everything up-front. You then have everything in the event you don't complete everything inside of their required time-scales.

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