| Richard Deal 2003-09-04, 6:25 pm |
| Julie,
My guess is because the Network Academies were complaining that there
students, after 1 or 2 years of going through the CCNA academy courses, were
having problems passing the exam. Therefore, in Cisco's infinite wisdom,
they problably decided to break it into two exams. I sort of saw this coming
when Cisco stopped teaching a lot of basic stuff in the ICND course and put
it in a CiscoPress book (CCNAB).
For people that want to take their time and not feel pressured into learning
everything at once, then the two-step approach is best. Of course, if you're
pinching every penny, then take the one exam approach.
Hope this helps!
Cheers!
--
Richard A. Deal
Visit my home page at http://home.cfl.rr.com/dealgroup/
Author of CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide (Exam 640-801),
Cisco PIX Firewalls, CCNA Secrets Revealed!, CCNP Remote Access Exam Prep,
CCNP Switching Exam Cram, and CCNP Cisco LAN Switch Configuration Exam Cram
Cisco Test Prep author for QuizWare, providing the most comprehensive Cisco
exams on the market.
"Julie" <info_nospam@vpnsolutions.notcom.butca> wrote in message
news:5dN5b.66225$PD3.4685239@nnrp1.uunet.ca...
> Does anyone have prefrences as to write the one 640-801 test or the
640-811&
> 641-821. Let us know why. Was this option offered before with the
640-607
> exam?
>
>
>
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