CompTIA A + has a total of four exams and areas of study, but your only requirement is to get certified in 2 to be thought of as qualified. Because of this, many educational establishments simply offer two. But giving you all four options will help you to build a more confident perspective of your subject, which you’ll come to realise is an important asset in the commercial world.
CompTIA A+ training programs teach diagnostic techniques and fault-finding – via hands on and remote access, alongside building and fixing and working in antistatic conditions.
If you’re considering being the kind of individual who works for a larger company – in network support, add Network+ to your CompTIA A+, or alternatively look at doing an MCSA or MCSE with Microsoft because it’s necessary to have a better comprehension of the way networks work.
Quite often, students have issues with a single training area which is often not even considered: The breakdown of the course materials before being couriered to your address.
The majority of training companies will set up a 2 or 3 year study programme, and deliver each piece one-by-one as you get to the end of each exam. Sounds reasonable? Well consider these facts:
Often, the staged breakdown prescribed by the provider doesn’t suit you. It may be difficult to get through all the modules within the time limits imposed?
The ideal circumstances are to get all the learning modules sent to your home before you even start; the complete package! Thus avoiding any future problems that could impede the reaching of your goals.
Doing your bit in progressive developments in new technology really is electrifying. You become one of a team of people creating a future for us all.
Many people are of the opinion that the technological revolution we have experienced is easing off. There is no truth in this at all. There are huge changes to come, and the internet particularly will be the biggest thing to affect the way we live.
A average IT employee in Great Britain can demonstrate that they get significantly more than fellow workers in other market sectors. Average salaries are amongst the highest in the country.
Excitingly, there is a lot more room for IT jobs development in Great Britain as a whole. The market sector continues to develop quickly, and as we have a significant shortage of skilled professionals, it’s highly unlikely that there’ll be any kind of easing off for quite some time to come.
Many people question why qualifications from colleges and universities are now falling behind more commercial certifications?
As we require increasingly more effective technological know-how, the IT sector has of necessity moved to specific, honed-in training that can only be obtained from the actual vendors – in other words companies such as CISCO, Adobe, Microsoft and CompTIA. Often this saves time and money for the student.
Clearly, an appropriate amount of background information must be covered, but core specialised knowledge in the exact job role gives a commercially educated student a real head start.
It’s a bit like the TV advert: ‘It does what it says on the tin’. The company just needs to know what they’re looking for, and then request applicants with the correct exam numbers. They’ll know then that all applicants can do what they need.
‘Exam Guarantees’ are often bundled with training offers – they always involve paying for the exam fees up-front, at the very beginning of your studies. Before you jump at guaranteed exams, think about this:
You’ll be charged for it somehow. You can be assured it’s not a freebie – it’s simply been shoe-horned into the price as a whole.
Students who go in for their examinations when it’s appropriate, paying as they go are in a much stronger position to qualify at the first attempt. They are aware of their spending and revise more thoroughly to be up to the task.
Doesn’t it make more sense to not pay up-front, but when you’re ready, not to pay the fees marked up by a training course provider, and also to sit exams more locally – rather than in some remote centre?
Including money in your training package for exams (plus interest – if you’re financing your study) is a false economy. Don’t line companies bank accounts with your hard-earned cash just to give them more interest! Many will hope you won’t get round to taking them – but they won’t refund the cash.
Remember, with ‘Exam Guarantees’ from most places – the company decides when you can re-take the exam. Subsequent exam attempts are only authorised at the company’s say so.
With average Prometric and VUE examinations in the United Kingdom costing around 112 pounds, by far the best option is to pay for them as you take them. Not to fork out thousands extra in up-front costs. Study, commitment and preparing with good quality mock and practice exams is what will really guarantee success.
(C) 2009 Scott Edwards. Look at www.it-courses-in-london.co.uk or Click Here.