IT Courses - Thoughts
There are four specialist areas of training in a full CompTIA A+ program; you're considered an A+ achiever when you've gained exams for 2 out of 4 subjects. This is the reason that most training providers limit themselves to 2 study areas. In reality to carry out a job effectively, you'll need the training for all four areas as a lot of employment will demand an awareness of the entire course. Don't feel pressured to qualify in them all, but it seems common sense that you take tutorials in all 4 subjects.
Once on the CompTIA A+, you will learn how to build, fix, repair and work in antistatic conditions. Diagnostic techniques and fault finding are also on the syllabus, as is remote access.
If you add Network+ to your CompTIA A+ training course, you will additionally be able to assist with or manage networks of computers, meaning you're in a position to move further up the career path.
Getting your first commercial position can feel more straightforward if you're supported with a Job Placement Assistance program. The fact of the matter is it's not as hard as some people make out to secure the right work - once you're trained and certified; the shortage of IT personnel in Britain looks after that.
You would ideally have CV and Interview advice and support though; also we would encourage all students to get their CV updated as soon as they start a course - don't wait till you've finished your exams.
Getting onto the 'maybe' pile of CV's is far better than not even being known about. Often junior support jobs are given to students (who've only just left first base.)
If you'd like to keep travelling time and costs to a minimum, then you may well find that a local (but specialised) recruitment consultancy may be more appropriate than a centralised service, for they're far more likely to be familiar with local employment needs.
To bottom line it, if you put as much hard work into finding your first IT position as into studying, you're not likely to experience problems. Some trainees inexplicably spend hundreds of hours on their course materials and then just stop once they've passed their exams and seem to suppose that interviewers know they're there.
Beware of putting too much emphasis, as many people do, on the certification itself. Training for training's sake is generally pointless; you're training to become commercially employable. You need to remain focused on where you want to go.
It's unfortunate, but thousands of new students begin programs that seem spectacular from the marketing materials, but which provides a job that is of no interest. Try talking to typical college graduates to see what we mean.
Spend some time thinking about how much you want to earn and the level of your ambition. This will influence which precise certifications you'll need to attain and how much effort you'll have to give in return.
Before you embark on a study course, trainees are advised to chat over the specific job requirements with an experienced industry advisor, in order to be sure the retraining programme covers all that is required.
Considering how a program is 'delivered' to you is often missed by many students. How many stages do they break the program into? What is the order and at what speed is it delivered?
A release of your materials stage by stage, as you complete each module is the usual method of releasing your program. This sounds sensible, but you should take these factors into account:
What if for some reason you don't get to the end of every exam? And what if you find the order of the modules counter-intuitive? Through no fault of your own, you might take a little longer and not receive all the modules you've paid for.
For future safety and flexibility, many trainees now want to insist that all study materials are delivered immediately, and not in stages. That means it's down to you in what order and how fast or slow you'd like to work.
People attracted to this sort of work can be very practical by nature, and won't enjoy sitting at a desk in class, and endless reading of dry academic textbooks. If this is putting you off studying, opt for more involving, interactive learning materials, where learning is video-based.
Many studies have proved that memory is aided when we receive multi-sensorial input, and we take action to use what we've learned.
Interactive full motion video involving demonstration and virtual lab's will beat books every time. And you'll find them fun and interesting.
Make sure to obtain a training material demonstration from any training college. You should ask for expert-led demonstrations, slideshows and virtual practice lab's for your new skills.
Pick CD and DVD ROM based physical training media every time. This then avoids all the potential pitfalls with broadband 'downtime' or slow-speeds.
Copyright 2009 S. Edwards. Pop over to Flash Courses or Website Design Course.
Filed under Computers by .