Hi,

I am at the Academy and the course is very good.
And we all have routers for every one of us. 
You have to check the course at all (teachers, structure) things like
this.

Best regards, 
Rodrigo Ramos


On Tue, 2002-06-04 at 12:08, Eric wrote:
> If you are the kind of person like me, where you like to be challenged and work 
> hard, and not be around slackers, I would skip the "Academy."  If you have some 
> money, just buy some routers.  This works really well if you know people who 
> you can rely on for help.  I don't think employers really care about the 
> diploma.  When I did the "Academy," I had several different teachers and they 
> all gave us the answers to the exam BEFORE we took it.  Not real high standards 
> of excellence. It's a joke.
> 
> 
> 
> Quoting Mathieu Patenaude <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 
> > I know that you can pass some courses from Cisco.  It is called CISCO
> > networking academy.
> > After you pass the courses, you get a "diploma".
> > Those courses can help you achieve the CCNA exam.
> > Anyway, is there a big difference between a person that has the
> > academy
> > diploma with a CCNA, and someone that only has a CCNA?
> > ...beside the fact that the academy courses proves that you physically
> > worked on CISCO routers?
> > What about jobs, does is have more value on a CV?
> > 
> > 
> > 

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