From: Joe Rinehart (jjrinehart@hotmail.com)
Date: Fri Oct 10 2008 - 11:12:20 ART
This is even true in teaching any of the certification disciplines...for
example when I took over leadership of the Seattle Cisco Users group one of
the things that the local Cisco team and I agreed upon was leading a study
group to develop local CCNA talent...
Joe Rinehart
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Bogdan Sass
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2008 11:45 AM
To: Joseph Brunner
Cc: reis.henrique@gmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: How to keep CCIE
Joseph Brunner wrote:
> Start teaching the NEW CCNP track in your spare time at a local school or
> college, or even amongst junior engineers.
>
> Its good to give back, and you WILL keep your knowledge!
> (just taught my spantree PVST/RSTP/MST lesson last night)
>
I DEFINITELY agree! Teaching will help you both keep your knowledge,
and learn new things (students have the most fascinating ways of
configuring routers :) ).
I'm a Cisco Networking Academy instructor myself, and today ( 1 week
after getting my number ) I just went back to... teaching CCNA! I'm not
suggesting that you should do the same ( teaching CCNP, as Joseph
suggested, is much better suited to your purposes ), but it definitely
feels good to revisit the basics from time to time! :D
-- Bogdan Sass CCAI,CCSP,JNCIA-ER,CCIE #22221 (RS) Information Systems Security Professional "Curiosity was framed - ignorance killed the cat"Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
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