MCSE track changes are getting tougher. But are the changes happening too quickly?
You Said It
MCSE track changes are getting tougher. But are the changes happening too quickly?
- By Linda Briggs
- 12/01/1999
Sometimes readers surprise me. When I wrote in my November
column that the tough new Windows 2000 track for MCSEs
represented a great opportunity more than anything else—and
perhaps simply what MCSEs have been asking for all along—I
expected some angry mail about Microsoft’s decisions.
Instead, readers replied in droves that they think Microsoft
is doing the right thing in raising the standard for the
MCSE. For example, one reader in the process of obtaining
his MCSE wrote, “I agree, the exams should be harder.
[And] there should be a minimum requirement for experience,
not a recommendation.”
“It’s about time that Microsoft decided to make the MCSE
certification truly valuable,” commented another MCSE.
“Microsoft is doing exactly what it needs to do to protect
NT [and] to protect their strongest and most successful
marketers—MCSEs. Way to go Microsoft. Make the certifications
really worth something!”
Almost all of those statements, however, were followed
by heated comments regarding the retirement date Microsoft
has set for the NT 4.0 exams (the end of 2000, giving
current MCSEs until the end of 2001 to recertify on Windows
2000).
The fact that Windows 2000 isn’t available yet and won’t
be for another three to six months from the time of this
writing raised plenty of concern about obtaining the proper
experience on the new product. “First of all, W2K hasn’t
even been released yet,” wrote an IT professional in Redmond
who supports a small IT shop and asked to remain unnamed.
“How am I to gain experience on a product that isn’t on
the shelf? A forced migration to a product that isn’t
even out yet sounds like more slick marketing.”
Plenty of companies will be running both NT 4.0 and Windows
2000 for some time to come, readers pointed out: “By decertifying
the 4.0 track in such a rushed manner, Microsoft has ensured
that future employers have no meaningful tool to measure
if potential technicians have the necessary skills to
administer 4.0/Win2K environments. Consider this: If the
4.0 track is decertified, no one will be teaching it.
If no one teaches it, new IT personnel will have no resources
to acquire the skills other than ‘playing’ with the software…
I’m all for raising standards, but let’s do it in a well-planned,
calculated manner.”
Or this from another MCSE: “I took six tests in a two-month
span, and passed them all—not because of cramming or classes,
but because of years of experience in real-world environments
with the products. How am I going to get that experience
on Win2K? Even if I implemented it as soon as it was commercially
available, we would be talking months. And who would be
stupid enough to implement a brand- new, untested, and
certainly unstable technology immediately upon its release?”
At any rate, now that the ship date for Win2K has apparently
slipped into 2000, Microsoft may be forced to reconsider
those dates.
In the meantime, your best bet is to keep Microsoft informed
of your opinion, since the certification folks have shown
that they can be responsive to customer feedback. We’ll
run some additional reader comments on the topic in the
January issue.
About the Author
Linda Briggs is the founding editor of MCP Magazine and the former senior editorial director of 101communications. In between world travels, she's a freelance technology writer based in San Diego, Calif.