Certification and Retired!
I wonder if I am the oldest Certification candidate in the UK who is not working in IT and indeed I am long retired being a carer to my disabled husband. I am 63.
I am very lucky because my local College has become a Microsoft Academy and my old City and Guilds Networking level 3 tutor is now an MCT and running the class. I get full fee remission and an access fund pays for my materials. All I pay is thirty quid College Registration fee. My tutor is very supportive too. I have had problems settling into the course and suffered early burnout and went off the idea for a while but some honest emails between myself and the tutor and a quick chat with him today has restored my faith in my ability to succeed.
Furthermore, I emailed the tutor this evening with a question about installing the eval copy of Server 2003 in the resource kit which I need to do the labs and so on and he came right back within a minute or so - how's that for support :) :cool: and I have created the new NTFS primary partition and am ready to instal. I will then use the XP partition my other computer as a client for practice. The fun comes when I get my new computer and can run two clients!
Funny, I was really down yesterday but now I am really looking forward to the rest of the course and even the exams - is this normal for MCSE candidates?
Making IT fun is hard to do, lousey material ..
Quote:
Originally Posted by NooNoo
..What I find amazing is the minutiae that the IT essentials exams call for... for instance, having to remember the i/o addresses for parallel and com ports - it's not like you can't look up this kind of stuff in the bios!! Also socket names for 286 upwards....yes even the masochistic enjoyment after going 10 rounds with windows..
Hijacking MorseLadies thread slightly ... which one are you doing wants this info ? (I think I had to know that for A+ about 10 years ago !) - this is one of the 'violent objections' I have to standard exams, knowing useless things, because once upon a time they were important .. (not that you ever needed to know this off the top of your head unless buying them imho) - I think whats important in IT is problem solving & ability to apply knowledge however aquired, but stubborn goes a long way ;) especially if you are 'partial' to a little of it :D.