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...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Monday: January 10, 2005



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Cisco To Launch New CCNA Exam, Add Two-Exam Option for Less-Experienced Candidates


6/23/2003 -- This week at its Networkers conference in Orlando, Cisco Systems will announce a new Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) exam, 640-801, to launch June 30.

The current CCNA exam (640-607), which debuted in March 2002, includes understanding the functions and operations of local area networks (LAN), Cisco IOS fundamentals, wide area networks (WAN), virtual private networks (VPN), and Storage Area Networks (SAN). Other topics covered are IP Addressing, Cisco Command Line Interface (CLI), Routing and Switching technologies and protocols. (Editor's Note: TCPmag.com provides a review of this exam, written by CCNP Andy Barkl, here.)

Nader Nanjiani, marketing programs manager of the Internet Learning Solutions Group at Cisco, said the 801 version of the CCNA exam has been updated to cover switching configuration, Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) and Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) protocols, and variable length subnet masking.

"This exam is more in-depth than 607, not a reduction," he commented. "These topics were already included in the ICND class that we're teaching now… [So] anyone who's taken the [Interconnecting Cisco Network Devices) course that was already out, [he or she] should be able to pass the new exam, because now [the exam] covers the chapters that weren't necessarily covered before."

The 640-607 exam is scheduled to retire Sept. 30, although candidates will be able to take the exam into early October as long as they schedule the test by the earlier date.

At the same technical conference for Cisco professionals, the company will also announce a new two-exam approach to the CCNA.

According to Nanjiani, the two new exams -- INTRO 640-821 and ICND 640-811 -- cover exactly the same content as the soon-to-debut 801 exam, but the information is split, with higher-level content in the ICND, and lower-level content in INTRO. "Now you have the option of taking a single exam if you can handle the content in one fell swoop…or piecemeal if you want to take more time," Nanjiani explained.

The INTRO test is currently available in beta form as 641-821. Nanjiani estimated that it would be available in live form in eight to 12 weeks. A corresponding course will be available later in July. The ICND exam will be available on June 30. Each exam will be valid for three years.

Nanjiani said that candidates will be able to choose for themselves which CCNA path to take; Cisco is only recommending that those with less networking experience choose the two-exam option. "We were hearing from our training partners that people were coming to the ICND class and having a difficult time keeping up…they didn't have the networking background," he explained. "No one is going to stop you, but [the INTRO exam] is a way for an individual to see how he or she stands before jumping into the ICND courses."

With the two-exam approach, candidates need to take the required exams within three years of each other to earn their CCNA. Both exams are 30 minutes shorter than the typical Cisco exam (60 minutes vs. 90 minutes) and will cost $100 each as opposed to the standard $125.

Passing either the ICND or INTRO exams alone does not earn the candidate any title, Nanjiani said, although current CCNAs will be allowed to use the new ICDN exam as a renewal requirement.

Nanjiani said that the company may consider offering a similar two-exam path for its Cisco Certfied Design Associate (CCDA) title, depending on customer feedback.

More information on these announcements should be published on Cisco's Web site here on Tuesday.  -Becky Nagel, Dian L. Schaffhauser



There are 85 CertCities.com user Comments for “Cisco To Launch New CCNA Exam, Add Two-Exam Option for Less-Experienced Candidates”
Page 4 of 9
6/26/03: Anonymous says: If you are a current CCNA, check out your recertification timeline using Cisco's Certification Tracking Tool. That will tell you by what date you have to recertify. If you spend a little more time navigating through Cisco's Career Certification Paths section you will learn what test(s) you will have to take in order to recertify. Spend some time browsing Cisco's web site and you can learn a lot.
6/26/03: Anonymous says: I wish this discussion thread had a "bright" knob so I could "turn up the intelligence" of the conversation.
6/26/03: Bobby Joe Hodunk from Trailer Park USA says: Funy, al u guyz half sutch badd speling, gramatikal erors, and r incapeable uv reeding and undurstanding an artikle, that eye fine itt hard two beeleeve anny uv u culd pas a tesst ore holed aye reesponsibble poesishun aneewear. Dont no wy u trie.
6/27/03: BoBo from Alabama says: Dang Bobby Joe, why you have to go puttin' us down like that? We all just want to be gittin' that there CCNA thing. The lady at the tech center I would be gettin' $80,000 a year if i get me one of those there things. YE HAAAAA i could buy my own NASCAR team with all that there money! You aints got to be so mean.
6/27/03: a nubian says: This is insane. 607 retiring after 18 months of existence? crap! More money for cisco more options for "know the ledge" seekers. Who profits? I say they should retire 607 12/03 so there should be a comparison with 801. Upgrade and phase off 607 = not the solution...(:)
6/27/03: Anonymous says: Exams are always going to be replaced, that's a fact of life. Also, anyone already holding a CCNA can renew it by passing any professional or CQS exam with a 642- prefix (so if your CCNA expires in 6 months), start on your CCNP by passing the new routing, remote access, switching, or CIT exam (and your CCNA renews for 3 years from the date of passing the exam).
6/28/03: Anonymous says: LOL!!!! This has got to be the best thread I've ever read!!! Quote: "...the 801 version of the CCNA exam has been updated to cover switching configuration, Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) and Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) protocols, and variable length subnet masking." Which are all things that should be understood when actually working with this stuff anyway, not just because Cisco all of a sudden requires it on a exam! Bottom line, when you have the experience, priority #1 (gaining the know-how!), and priority #2 (passing the exams), are quite easily fulfilled. Someone said it earlier, it really doesn't matter which cert you earn (new/old) or which way you earn it (1 or 2 exams), IF YOU DO NOT HAVE EXPERIENCE & WORKING KNOWLEDGE OF THE PRODUCT, YOU ARE NOT GOING TO WALK INTO ANYWHERE EARNING $80,000!!! Get it?!?!?! :-)
6/28/03: Anonymous says: After having read and thoroughly studied over 25,000 pages of IT crap and having passed a butload of exams (MCSE CCNA), I'm ready to change careers. Those who started the same place I did but just a few years before, have the job market cornered. It was all a matter of timing and those who came in at the right time (who aren't necessarity any smarter), have the job getting experience on their resumes.
6/30/03: Anonymous says: In a few years you'll be up against droves of cisco trained very smart high school nerds willing to work for entry level wages of seven or eight dollars per hour. Face the facts most of you dreamers are spitting into the wind! Change careers while you can!
7/1/03: Anonymous says: guys just one thing i am a student of BBIT at Informatics i have a stroung apposition of cisco and other vendors i feel that it's just a reason of making more and more revenue for them...and you poor IT souls keep on wasting your hard earned money the bottom line is to get a good overall degree and then to work...cuz experience is everything
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