11 Mar
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.
You may also want to consider doing Network+ as it will enable you to work with networks, which is where the bigger salaries are.
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.
Drop-shipping your training elements one stage at a time, as you pass each exam is the usual method of releasing your program. This sounds logical, but you might like to consider this:
Students often discover that their providers ‘standard’ path of training isn’t ideal for them. It’s often the case that a different order of study is more expedient. Could it cause problems if you don’t get everything done within their exact timetable?
In a perfect world, you’d ask for every single material to be delivered immediately – enabling you to have them all to return to any point – at any time you choose. You can also vary the order in which you move through the program where a more intuitive path can be found.
At times people don’t catch on to what IT is all about. It’s electrifying, revolutionary, and means you’re working on technology that will impact the whole world for generations to come.
We’re only just starting to understand how all this will mould and change our lives. The way we correlate with the world as a whole will be profoundly affected by computers and the web.
Let’s not forget that on average, the income of a person in the world of IT in the United Kingdom is significantly higher than in other market sectors, therefore you will be in a good position to gain much more with professional IT knowledge, than you could reasonably hope to achieve elsewhere.
Due to the technological sector developing nationally and internationally, it’s likely that the search for well trained and qualified IT technicians will remain buoyant for the significant future.
So, why might we choose commercial certification as opposed to the usual academic qualifications gained through tech’ colleges and universities?
Corporate based study (in industry terminology) is most often much more specialised. Industry is aware that such specialised knowledge is necessary to handle an increasingly more technical marketplace. CISCO, Adobe, Microsoft and CompTIA dominate in this arena.
Academic courses, as a example, can often get caught up in too much loosely associated study – and a syllabus that’s too generalised. Students are then held back from getting enough specific knowledge about the core essentials.
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:
It’s very clear we’re still being charged for it – it’s not so hard to see that it’s been added into the full cost of the package supplied by the course provider. It’s definitely not free – and it’s insulting that we’re supposed to think it is!
For those who want to qualify first ‘go’, then the most successful route is to fund each exam as you take it, focus on it intently and apply yourself as required.
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?
Why borrow the money or pay in advance (plus interest of course) on examinations when you didn’t need to? Big margins are made by companies getting paid upfront for exams – and then hoping that you won’t take them all.
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 S. Edwards. Browse around it-courses-in-london.co.uk or This Site.
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