MCSE : Security Specialist
GET
CERTIFIED IN JUST 18 DAYS - 2003 PATH
Curriculum for the accelerated Microsoft
Windows Training Course
The school's primary goal is your
education.
We provide thorough instructor-led training to ensure that you learn
the fundamentals, obtain hands-on skills and earn your
certification. You will emerge able to immediately apply your new
knowledge in your career environment.
We have an aggressive educational class
schedule that thoroughly covers all essential elements necessary to
become Microsoft certified.
Day 1-5 Installing, Configuring, and
Administering Microsoft Windows XP Professional 70-270
Day 6-7 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows Server 2003
Environment 70-290
Day 8-9 CompTIA Security+ SY0-101
Day 10-13 Implementing, Managing, and Maintaining a Microsoft
Windows Server 2003 Network Infrastructure 70-291
Day 14 Planning, Implementing, and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows
Server 2003 Active Directory Infrastructure 70-294
Day 15-16 Designing a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Active Directory
and Network Infrastructure 70-297
Day 17 Planning and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows Server 2003
Network Infrastructure 70-293
Day 18 Final Review/Makeup Day
Our daily schedule incorporates
different modes of instruction and learning environments to ensure
that students learn, retain, comprehend, and can apply knowledge
critical to becoming certified.
8:15 am to 9:00 am
Breakfast
9:00 am to 1:00 pm Instruction
1:00 pm to 1:30 pm Lunch
1:30 pm to 5:30 pm Instruction/Hands-on Labs
5:30 pm to 7:30 pm Dinner and Relaxation
7:30 pm to 8:00 pm Wrap Session
8:00 pm to 9:00 pm Practice Drills
Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Program:
- Allows you to achieve your certifications in a fraction of the
time of 'traditional training' while delivering industry-leading
exam passing percentages
- Helps students grasp complex technical concepts more easily by
identifying and catering to individual student learning styles
through a mixed visual, auditory and kinesthetic-tactual delivery
system
- Enhances retention by employing accelerated learning techniques
focused on committing information to long-term memory
Network Technologies
You use different network technologies to communicate between
computers within LANs and WANs. You may use a combination of
technologies to get the best cost-benefit and maximum efficiency
from your network design. Many network technologies are
available, including:
-
Ethernet.
-
Token ring.
-
Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM).
-
Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI).
-
Frame relay.
One of the ways in which these technologies differ is the set of
rules that each uses to place data onto the network cable and to
remove data from the cable. This is called
access method.
When data moves on the network, these various access methods
regulate the flow of network traffic.
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