CompTIA A Plus Support Training Clarified
The CompTIA A+ training program covers four areas of training; you’re thought of as an A+ achiever when you’ve achieved certifications for 2 out of 4 subjects. This is why most training providers only teach 2 specialised areas. In fact you will need the training for all four areas as many jobs will ask for the skills and knowledge of the entire course. It isn’t necessary to take all four exams, however we’d advise that you take tutorials in all 4 subjects.
When you embark on the A+ training course you’ll be taught how to build, fix, repair and work in antistatic conditions. You’ll also cover fault finding and diagnostics, through both hands-on and remote access.
If you’re considering being someone who works for a larger company – in network support, build on A+ with Network+, or follow the Microsoft route – MCP’s, MCSA or MCSE in order to have a wider knowledge of how networks work.
Ensure all your accreditations are current and what employers are looking for – don’t bother with studies which end up with a useless in-house certificate or plaque.
To an employer, only the top companies such as Microsoft, Adobe, CompTIA or Cisco (for instance) will get you short-listed. Nothing else will cut the mustard.
Talk to a professional consultant and we’d be amazed if they couldn’t provide you with many horror stories of students who’ve been conned by dodgy salespeople. Make sure you deal with a skilled professional who asks lots of questions to uncover the best thing for you – not for their paycheque! You need to find the very best place to start for you.
With some live experience or some accreditation, your starting-point of learning is different from a beginner.
If this is going to be your first effort at studying for an IT examination then you may want to begin with some basic Microsoft package and Windows skills first.
For the most part, a normal student really has no clue in what direction to head in a computing career, let alone which market they should look at getting trained in.
Perusing lists of IT career possibilities is no use whatsoever. Surely, most of us have no concept what our own family members do for a living – let alone understand the ins and outs of a particular IT career.
Contemplation on many issues is essential if you want to uncover a solution that suits you:
* Personality factors as well as your interests – what work-oriented areas please or frustrate you.
* Do you hope to accomplish a specific aspiration – for instance, working from home in the near future?
* How highly do you rate salary – is an increase your main motivator, or does job satisfaction rate further up on the scale of your priorities?
* Because there are so many ways to train in computing – you’ll need to get a solid grounding on what differentiates them.
* It makes sense to take in what is different for all the training areas.
The bottom line is, the best way of understanding everything necessary is by means of a meeting with someone that knows the industry well enough to give you the information required.
One interesting way that training providers make a lot more is via an ‘exam inclusive’ package then giving it ‘Exam Guarantee’ status. It looks impressive, till you look at the facts:
You’re paying for it by some means. One thing’s for sure – it isn’t free – they’ve just worked it into the package price.
People who take each progressive exam, paying as they go are much better placed to get through first time. They are conscious of what they’ve paid and revise more thoroughly to be ready for the task.
Why should you pay your training course provider at the start of the course for exam fees? Find the best deal you can at the time, rather than coughing up months or even a year or two in advance – and do it in a local testing centre – rather than possibly hours away from your area.
Big margins are secured by a number of companies that get money for exam fees in advance. A number of students don’t take them for various reasons but the company keeps the money. Believe it or not, there are training companies who rely on that fact – as that’s how they make a lot of their profit.
You should fully understand that re-takes through organisations who offer an ‘Exam Guarantee’ inevitably are heavily regulated. They will insist that you take pre-tests first so you can prove to them you have a good chance of passing.
Spending hundreds or even thousands extra on an ‘Exam Guarantee’ is remiss – when consistent and systematic learning, coupled with quality exam simulation software is what will really guarantee success.
Copyright Scott Edwards. Check out www.learninglolly.com/IT_Certification.html or A+ Course.
