Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA)

CCNA Routing & Switching

58% Discount

Vendor Exam

Duration 6 months

Hardware Lab

On Campus

Course Fee

BDT. 12,000/=

About CCNA

Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) is the first step in a Cisco career certification path. Particular emphasis is given to using decision-making and problem-solving techniques in applying science, mathematics, communication, and social studies concepts to solve networking problems. Students will learn how to install and configure Cisco switches and routers in multi-protocol networks, using local and wide-area networks (LANs and WANs), provide Level 1 troubleshooting service and improve network performance and security. Additionally, instruction and training are provided in the proper care, maintenance, and use of networking software tools and equipment, as well as all local, state, and federal safety, building, and environmental codes and regulations.

Class Time

Sunday & Monday at 09 pm-11 pm

Lab Class

Saturday at 2:00 pm-4:30 pm

Class Platform

Cisco WebEx or Zoom Meet

Target Audience

The Cisco Networking Academy CCNAv7 curriculum is designed for participants seeking entry-level jobs in the ICT industry or hoping to fulfill prerequisites to pursue more specialized ICT skills.

The CCNA v7 curriculum is presented in three courses

CCNA Part-1: Introduction to Networks (ITN)

The first course in the CCNA curriculum introduces the architectures, models, protocols, and networking elements that connect users, devices, applications and data through the internet and across modern computer networks – including IP addressing and Ethernet fundamentals. By the end of the course, students can build simple local area networks (LANs) that integrate IP addressing schemes, and foundational network security, and perform basic configurations for routers and switches.

CCNA Part-2: Switching, Routing and Wireless Essentials (SRWE)

The second course in the CCNA curriculum focuses on switching technologies and router operations that support small-to-medium business networks and includes wireless local area networks (WLANs) and security concepts. Students learn key-switching and routing concepts. They can perform basic network configuration and troubleshooting, identify and mitigate LAN security threats, and configure and secure a basic WLAN.

CCNA Part-3: Enterprise Networking, Security, and Automation (ENSA)

 The third course in the CCNAv7 curriculum describes the architectures and considerations related to designing, securing, operating, and troubleshooting enterprise networks. This course covers wide area network (WAN) technologies and quality of service (QoS) mechanisms used for secure remote access. ENSA also introduces software-defined networking, virtualization, and automation concepts that support the digitalization of networks. Students gain skills to configure and troubleshoot enterprise networks and learn to identify and protect against CyberSecurity threats. They are introduced to network management tools and learn key concepts of software-defined networking, including controller-based architectures and how application programming interfaces (APIs) enable network automation.