Cisco Certified Network Associate Certificate

The objective of this certificate is to provide students the knowledge and skills necessary to prepare for the Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) Certification Examination. Satisfactory passing of the exam will lead to employment in entry-level positions in the small office and/or home office (SOHO) market. The CCNA Certificate indicates the ability to work in small businesses or organizations using networks that have fewer than 100 nodes. The certificate holder is able to install and configure Cisco switches and routers in multi-protocol interworking using LAN and WAN interfaces, can provide Level 1 troubleshooting service, can improve network performance and security, and can perform entry-level task in the planning, design, installation, operations, and troubleshooting of Ethernet and TCP/IP networks.

Completion of the following 15.00 units qualifies the student for the Cisco Certified Network Associate Certificate.

Major/Program Requirements

Required Courses:

CIS 140Networking for Home and Small Business (CISCO CCNA 1)

3.75

CIS 141Working at a Small - to - Medium Business or ISP (Cisco CCNA 2)

3.75

CIS 142Introducing Routing and Switching in the Enterprise (CISCO CCNA 3)

3.75

CIS 143Designing and Configuring Local and Wide Area Networks Services (CISCO CCNA 4)

3.75

Total Credit Hours: 15.00

A student receiving a degree/certificate in this field will be able to:

  • Work collaboratively on a team project
  • Effectively listen and ask critical questions to identify customer requests, issues and concerns
  • Apply analytical and logical thinking to gathering and analyzing information, designing and testing solutions to problems, and formulating plans
  • Install, configure, operate and troubleshoot simple- switched Local Area, simple-routed Wide Area Networks
  • Install, configure a router, manage router IOS software, configure routing protocols, and create access lists controlling router access
  • Complete a comprehensive case study incorporat- ing single-are OSPF, RIPv2, static routes, VLANS and 802.q trunking, Frame Relay, VLSM, DHCP, NAT and access control lists on the appropriate routers and interfaces