02-07-2021, 05:29 AM
As I planned, I have now taken and passed the CompTIA Cloud+ exam. This should transfer into TESU as CYB-450 Cloud Computing. To finish out the BS-Cybersecurity's cloud security pathway, I will also need CYB-451 Cloud Security and Privacy. I'm wondering if any of you have suggestions for possible alt credit equivalences. I have not even bothered to ask TESU advising, given their reputation for being unhelpful in similar matters.
Although the TESU BS in Cybersecurity isn't really thought of as an alt-credit-friendly program, it looks like significant requirements can be taken care of this way. Here's what I have found for the specific cloud security requirement:
Additionally, what is the best way to predict transfer equivalencies for alt-credit? The more 'traditional' sources are of course well-documented here and on the wiki, but what about everything else? I presume that I simply look at the ACE/NCCRS rec and find the closest thing in the TESU catalog, correct? How much does the credit recommendation and level actually matter? If something sounds close, could TESU be convinced to put it in anyway? Should I bother running anything by TESU advising or having them preplan things?
If this cloud security requirement can't be fulfilled via alt credit, that's fine. I'm planning to take enough classes at TESU to dodge the tuition waiver in any case. Also, I am okay with gambling on a cert or two if needed; at worst it's just something else to put on the resume.
Here are my notes on the CompTIA Cloud+ CV0-002 certification if anyone was interested:
This is a challenging exam. I expected it to take a cloudy flavor on material from the A+, Network+, and Security+ exams. As a more niche cert, there is a dearth of preparation materials available. The usual suspects in the CompTIA prep realm don't have anything for Cloud+. I ended up buying a used copy of one of the two officially endorsed study guide books. I skimmed it cover to cover, taking notes and thoroughly reviewing any weak areas. I used all the practice tests in the book, plus the included online test. After whizzing through the online exam simulator and scoring above 90%, I decided I was ready.
When I opened the exam, my heart sunk to see a performance-based question simulating a fibre channel SAN requiring reconfiguration. The book had only glossed over FC with a few paragraphs of basic information. I was woefully unprepared for that problem, as well as the other FC and storage networking questions that came up. I wholeheartedly agree with the Amazon reviews stating that the book does a poor job covering exam objectives. Many topics that the book covered extensively had a minimal presence in the actual exam. Meanwhile, many question types and vocabulary terms from the exam weren't in the book. Overall, the depth and complexity of questions far exceeded what I expected given my practice tests and previous CompTIA certifications. I took almost the entire allotted time to get through and review the questions, whereas I had finished my previous CompTIA exams in about 20 minutes. Don't be misled by the term cloud, as this exam is actually heavily focused on private and hybrid cloud implementation and operations in addition to public cloud deployments. The subjective questions that CompTIA is infamous for make frequent appearances in this exam. Be prepared to see a lot of "company x has a y with constraints blah blah blah and is experiencing z, what is the best solution" type questions, where you have to rack your brain trying to guess which of the plausible answers the exam writer liked the most. Overall, it was a very stressful experience.
I was extremely relieved to finish the exam and receive my high passing score of 843. At times, I seriously doubted if I would even finish.
The Pearson OnVUE remote proctoring system worked well again, with one significant hitch. I'm glad I did the system test beforehand, as I would have missed my exam otherwise. The latest version of their browserlock software treats some of the Xbox bloatware shipped with Windows as a prohibited process. Frustratingly, this item doesn't show up in the task manager and can't be uninstalled through the normal GUI. Here are the instructions I used to eliminate it using Powershell. Otherwise, I had no problems starting and taking my exam. The proctor launched my exam in about a minute, without needing to talk to me at all.
Although the TESU BS in Cybersecurity isn't really thought of as an alt-credit-friendly program, it looks like significant requirements can be taken care of this way. Here's what I have found for the specific cloud security requirement:
- ISC2 CCSP has an ACE rec for cloud security, but it's only LL. Besides, the exam is $600, and getting the certification requires endorsement + work experience that I don't have. This is a shame because ISC2 has many IT/cybersecurity exams with LL and UL ACE recommendations. ISACA is the same deal.
- Cisco CCNP-security has a CACE rec for UL network security. Probably not close enough to cloud security.
- Several Microsoft exams/certs have ACE or NCCRS recommendations for cloud-computing related credit, but I don't think any of these would really qualify as UL cloud security credit: Azure DevOps Azure Solutions Architect Managing MS Teams Dynamics 365 Fundamentals 365 Security Administrator (unknown ACE rec, LL NCCRS) Azure Security engineer (LL at ACE and NCCRS)
Additionally, what is the best way to predict transfer equivalencies for alt-credit? The more 'traditional' sources are of course well-documented here and on the wiki, but what about everything else? I presume that I simply look at the ACE/NCCRS rec and find the closest thing in the TESU catalog, correct? How much does the credit recommendation and level actually matter? If something sounds close, could TESU be convinced to put it in anyway? Should I bother running anything by TESU advising or having them preplan things?
If this cloud security requirement can't be fulfilled via alt credit, that's fine. I'm planning to take enough classes at TESU to dodge the tuition waiver in any case. Also, I am okay with gambling on a cert or two if needed; at worst it's just something else to put on the resume.
Here are my notes on the CompTIA Cloud+ CV0-002 certification if anyone was interested:
This is a challenging exam. I expected it to take a cloudy flavor on material from the A+, Network+, and Security+ exams. As a more niche cert, there is a dearth of preparation materials available. The usual suspects in the CompTIA prep realm don't have anything for Cloud+. I ended up buying a used copy of one of the two officially endorsed study guide books. I skimmed it cover to cover, taking notes and thoroughly reviewing any weak areas. I used all the practice tests in the book, plus the included online test. After whizzing through the online exam simulator and scoring above 90%, I decided I was ready.
When I opened the exam, my heart sunk to see a performance-based question simulating a fibre channel SAN requiring reconfiguration. The book had only glossed over FC with a few paragraphs of basic information. I was woefully unprepared for that problem, as well as the other FC and storage networking questions that came up. I wholeheartedly agree with the Amazon reviews stating that the book does a poor job covering exam objectives. Many topics that the book covered extensively had a minimal presence in the actual exam. Meanwhile, many question types and vocabulary terms from the exam weren't in the book. Overall, the depth and complexity of questions far exceeded what I expected given my practice tests and previous CompTIA certifications. I took almost the entire allotted time to get through and review the questions, whereas I had finished my previous CompTIA exams in about 20 minutes. Don't be misled by the term cloud, as this exam is actually heavily focused on private and hybrid cloud implementation and operations in addition to public cloud deployments. The subjective questions that CompTIA is infamous for make frequent appearances in this exam. Be prepared to see a lot of "company x has a y with constraints blah blah blah and is experiencing z, what is the best solution" type questions, where you have to rack your brain trying to guess which of the plausible answers the exam writer liked the most. Overall, it was a very stressful experience.
I was extremely relieved to finish the exam and receive my high passing score of 843. At times, I seriously doubted if I would even finish.
The Pearson OnVUE remote proctoring system worked well again, with one significant hitch. I'm glad I did the system test beforehand, as I would have missed my exam otherwise. The latest version of their browserlock software treats some of the Xbox bloatware shipped with Windows as a prohibited process. Frustratingly, this item doesn't show up in the task manager and can't be uninstalled through the normal GUI. Here are the instructions I used to eliminate it using Powershell. Otherwise, I had no problems starting and taking my exam. The proctor launched my exam in about a minute, without needing to talk to me at all.
TESU Class of 2024 BSBA-CIS+GM, BSIT, ASNSM-CS+Math, AAS-GEN
Earned credits from Sophia, SDC, ASU ULC, TEEX, Microsoft, Strayer, TESU, Saylor, DSST, CLEP, CompTIA, StraighterLine, and others since starting in April 2020
Earned credits from Sophia, SDC, ASU ULC, TEEX, Microsoft, Strayer, TESU, Saylor, DSST, CLEP, CompTIA, StraighterLine, and others since starting in April 2020