Contact Information: Press Contact: Cara Sloman Cisco Systems, Inc. 831-440-2411 csloman@cisco.com
Cisco Networking Academy Introduces Innovative Approach to Learning, Teaching and Curricula
New CCNA and CCNP Curricula Address Students Unique Needs to Prepare for Rewarding Careers in IT Networking
| Source: Cisco Systems, Inc.
SAN JOSE, CA--(Marketwire - June 25, 2007) - For nearly a decade, Cisco® (NASDAQ : CSCO )
Networking Academy® has partnered with the educational community to help
people worldwide realize the dream of a better life by teaching valuable
networking and IT skills. Cisco Networking Academy today announced an
evolution of its core curriculum to keep pace with the swiftly changing
requirements of an increasingly connected world and the growing demand for
a technically skilled workforce in a competitive global marketplace. These
new courses are the direct result of the Networking Academy's increased
focus on providing students the skills they need to pursue rewarding IT
careers in business-critical positions and industries ranging from
technology and finance to medicine and entertainment.
The newly expanded Networking Academy curriculum provides both entry-level
and more advanced students with the expertise they need to succeed in a
wide range of careers. The curriculum now consists of two tracks, CCNA
Discovery and CCNA Exploration, which address different student segments
based on their academic experience and goals. The Networking Academy CCNP
curricula has also been updated to prepare entry level and advanced
students for careers in enterprise networking.
"With the dramatic advancements in networking technology over the last ten
years, today's highly competitive global marketplace requires a workforce
that is technically skilled," said Amy Christen, vice president, Cisco
Networking Academy and Corporate Affairs Operations. "We recognize that
'one size does not fit all' and the Networking Academy needs to evolve to
accommodate differences in student capabilities, goals, and environments
around the globe. The new curricula's segmented approach provides a solid
foundation of IT skills to help prepare students for IT and networking
certification. It helps open the door to rewarding careers and
opportunities to improve the future for themselves and their communities."
John Higgins from the University of Central England, Birmingham said, "The
new CCNA curricula will take the Cisco Networking Academy to new heights.
With relevant content and activities to meet the needs of different student
segments, it will attract students and retain their attention from start to
finish."
CCNA Discovery provides students with technical skills as well as career
exploration and soft skills necessary to succeed in entry level networking
professions such as a network technician, help desk technician and
pre-sales support. Upon entering the CCNA Discovery curriculum, students
are not expected to have any particular technical ability or knowledge,
beyond basic PC usage skills. CCNA Discovery maps directly to everyday
experiences with networks and covers key networking concepts based on the
types of practical network environments students may encounter -- from
small office and home office (SOHO) networking to more complex enterprise
and theoretical networking models later in the curriculum. It uses
easy-to-follow, extensive labs with detailed instructions and feedback to
help students learn through real experience how to design, build and
maintain networks. The courses use a career-oriented approach to learning
networking. CCNA Discovery is designed to be offered as an independent
curriculum or integrated into broader course of study at secondary schools,
technical schools and colleges.
"Students will love the fresh, clean look of the new CCNA Discovery
curriculum because it is dynamic and interactive with excellent graphics,"
said Linda Lester, from the Chesterfield Technical Center, an organization
that provides specialized training to students at Chesterfield County High
Schools in Virginia.
CCNA Exploration provides students with the technical skills necessary to
succeed in networking-related degree programs and a wide range of
networking professions such as network technician, network administrator
and network engineer. CCNA Exploration allows students to learn these
skills in a more rigorous, comprehensive, theoretical and practical way
reflective of degree-oriented college and university-level educational
practices. The participants in CCNA Exploration are expected to have
advanced problem solving and analytical skills typically associated with
students pursuing a degree in engineering, math or science. The curriculum
uses language that allows for integration with other engineering concepts
and includes complex and challenging hands-on labs, where students must
derive final solutions potentially requiring additional research and
without step-by-step instructions. CCNA Exploration can be easily
integrated into existing curricula or degree programs at technical schools,
colleges and universities.
Dr. Gyula Feher, Budapest Tech, Faculty of Informatics, said, "The new CCNA
Exploration curriculum provides an efficient and challenging learning
experience. The text is demanding in its formulation and at the same time
easy to understand for non-native speakers of English. The expressive
graphics, interactive activities and real world labs are excellent and a
great help for the learner."
CCNA Discovery and CCNA Exploration both provide an introduction to
advanced technologies such as voice, video, wireless and security. Both
curricula also include embedded "e-doing," which applies the principle that
people learn best by doing. With a new graphical user interface,
multimedia Flash-based activities, and embedded simulation software (Packet
Tracer), students are provided with a rich and engaging interactive
learning experience that increases comprehension.
"With all the labs, games and activities, the new CCNA curricula will
stimulate students to explore further and deeper into networking
technology," said Ana Chupungco, from the Philippine Science High School in
Quezon City, Philippines.
The new version of Packet Tracer v4.1 provides students with the ability to
create a network with a virtually unlimited number of devices, encouraging
open practice, discovery, and troubleshooting only limited by a student's
imagination. Beyond simulation, Packet Tracer provides a way for the
visualization of internal operations and data passing in a network
environment to accelerate the learning of networking concepts.
"The integration of Packet Tracer into the curriculum makes it easier to
acquire the details of complex operation, which is rather difficult to
present by traditional tools and methodologies," said Dr. Feher. He
continued, "It is wonderful to partner with Cisco to educate students for
hi-tech careers and provide industry certifications that are highly
marketable in today's economy."
The updated CCNP curriculum provides the knowledge and skills necessary to
deploy and maintain fully integrated network infrastructure services and
applications. The curriculum focuses on the advanced skills required to
manage the end-to-end network infrastructure and goes beyond core routing
and switching to include applications deployed on the edge of the network,
such as wireless, security and voice. It includes topics such as converged
networks, quality of service (QoS), virtual private networks (VPNs) and
broadband technologies. CCNP integrates next-generation network devices and
services engineered to provide wire-speed delivery of concurrent data,
voice, video and wireless services with optimized security.
To complement the introduction of these products, a student recruitment
video is being launched simultaneously to pique the interest of students
considering their next steps in IT skills learning and further reinforce
the notions of significant job availability and cool careers. Students can
also begin to acquaint themselves with Cisco Networking Academy by
exploring AcademyNetSpace (www.academynetspace.com) and signing up for the
NetSpace Challenge to test their IT knowledge against the global Networking
Academy community.
To support the new curriculum, Cisco Learning Institute has partnered with
the Networking Academy to produce a variety of instructor training
materials, including the next generation of instructor resources called
Interactive Course Guides (ICGs). ICGs provide customized instructional
support and tools including teaching goals, critical concepts, suggestions
for teaching difficult networking areas, discussion ideas, case studies,
extended labs, videos on demand, and technical briefings. Cisco Learning
Institute's ICGs and other instructor training material can be accessed
from the Cisco Networking Academy web portal.
Availability
On June 25, 2007, the new CCNA curricula (English versions) will be
generally available: CCNA Discovery courses "Networking for Home and Small
Businesses" and "Working at a Small-to-Medium Business or ISP"; and CCNA
Exploration courses "Network Fundamentals" and "Routing Protocols and
Concepts." English versions of CCNA Discovery courses "Introducing Routing
and Switching in the Enterprise" and "Designing and Supporting Computer
Networks," and CCNA Exploration courses "LAN Switching and Wireless" and
"Accessing the WAN," will be available by December 2007.
For self-guided preview tours of CCNA Discovery and CCNA Exploration
visit: http://www.cisco.com/web/learning/netacad/course_catalog/newCCNA.html
The curricula align with the new CCENT and updated CCNA certifications.
Additional information is available at:
http://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2007/prod_062507d.html
For more information about the Cisco Networking Academy Program, visit:
http://www.cisco.com/go/netacad
About Cisco Systems
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