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January 1999

ACREW MCSE Boot Camp


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SideBar    Brian Goes to Camp

This is not your father's boot camp

The Accelerated Certification Real Education Workshops (ACREW) MCSE Boot Camp in Evergreen, Colorado, isn't exactly the boot camp your father went through. This boot camp has instructors rather than drill sergeants, and gourmet food rather than compressed cardboard. But the MCSE boot camp isn't a spa--­attendees suffer from sleepless nights, high stress levels, and a feeling of being always under the gun.

ACREW has been in business since October 1996. The company pioneered the 16-day MCSE boot camp format.

ACREW's Soda Creek Lodge is fairly isolated in the Rocky Mountains. Boot camp recruits have no distractions from the nearby city of Denver. Thus, they can focus on the task at hand--­becoming MCSEs. The atmosphere is conducive to group study, which is what makes the program work and which is why I'm hanging an MCSE certificate on my office wall in the Windows NT Magazine Lab.

No Pain, No Gain
The boot camp method of obtaining your MCSE is challenging, but I prefer it to Microsoft's typical Authorized Technical Education Center (ATEC) classes. ATEC classes last a few hours each day for 1 or 2 weeks. After you complete a class, you take the corresponding Microsoft exam. If you pass the exam, you move on to the next class, until you pass all six exams. ATEC classes cost approximately $2000 each (which totals $12,000 per MCSE). In comparison, a boot camp consists of 16 to 18 hours of intense study each day for 2 weeks. An ACREW boot camp is 20 to 37 percent cheaper than a series of ATEC classes.

Most people can't take a 16-day sabbatical from work to attend an MCSE boot camp without using all their vacation time and then some. An improvement in the boot camp format would be 2- or 3-day MCSE boot camps that cover one or two of the required exams in a weekend. Then, individuals could better integrate MCSE study with their jobs and private lives.

However, if you can get away from work for a couple of weeks, I definitely recommend an MCSE boot camp, particularly the ACREW boot camp. I'd rather take the pain all in one shot than space it out over several weeks or a few weekends. Although I'd like to be certified on Microsoft Proxy Server, SQL Server, and NT Workstation just for the heck of it, I have no interest in dragging through classes every night for several weeks or trying to read one of the Microsoft Press books. Give me intense classes for 16 days in a row, then make them go away--­please don't prolong the agony.

The ACREW MCSE program consists of six exams covering various topics, including networking, OSs, trouble-shooting, and compatibility. The combination of exams I took to complete the MCSE requirements were Windows 95 (rather than NT Workstation), Networking Essentials, TCP/IP, NT Server, NT Enterprise Server, and Internet Information Server (IIS) 4.0. ACREW no longer offers the Win95 option.

Microsoft's test administrator, Sylvan Prometric, compiles the tests randomly from a pool of 150 questions, of which between 50 and 55 show up on an exam. The luck of the draw from test to test can improve your score dramatically. If you fail a test by only a few points, retake it right away. Sylvan takes about half an hour to set you up for another test.

Microsoft Press publishes a series of books that contain all the answers to the tests. Memorize the books and pass the tests--­easy in concept but quite difficult in practice. And the Microsoft Press authors don't make your task any easier. I've never read more obscure definitions or confusing explanations. One of our instructors speculated that Microsoft Press locks its authors in a closet and doesn't let them out until they come up with a text that doesn't make any sense. Because the Microsoft Press books contain such muddled information, I was glad to have the ACREW instructors, my classmates, and the Transcender practice tests that ACREW provided to help sort things out.

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Reader Comments
I’m on what I call a “slow track” to MCSE certification, taking tests when I can. Brian Gallagher’s Lab Reports: “ACREW MCSE Boot Camp” (January 1999) was inspiring, and it has lit a fire under my backside to get busy and get my MCSE. Thanks for the inspiration, and congratulations to Brian on his achievement.<br>
--Steve Mitzel

Steve Mitzel August 06, 1999


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