Can a video series help you learn Win2K at the same time it prepares you for MCSE certification?
Windows 2000 at the Movies
Can a video series help you learn Win2K at the same time it prepares you for MCSE certification?
- By James Carrion
- June 01, 2000
Working by sitting in front of the TV with the remote
in hand may seem like a dream come true for your average
couch potato, but the time I spent in front of the tube
preparing this month’s review was all business. No time
to switch over to the daytime soaps or watch my favorite
reruns of Seinfeld. I was evaluating Specialized
Solutions’ new five-part video series, “Windows 2000 MCSE
Upgrade,” to ascertain if it’s an effective tool to help
MCPs achieve the coveted new Windows 2000 MCSE certification.
This was my first experience with video-based computer
training, since I’ve spent most of my career delving into
books, CBT-based media, and instructor-led classroom training.
But I’ve used enough video-based instruction for other
subject matter to know what essential ingredients I require.
Knowledge building can come from many sources, so I was
eager to find out whether or not this form of self-study
would be up to the task. I slipped in the first video,
pressed play, and kicked up my feet with a cup of coffee
in hand. You don’t need a surround-sound home theater
for an event like this, but a steady supply of caffeine
helps.
The series starts off as you’d expect, with a discussion
of the various versions of Windows 2000 and their relative
similarities and differences. But from there, MCSE and
instructor Ross Brunson jumps into a haphazard overview
of the various new technologies integrated into Win2K.
True to a general overview, he promises to elaborate later
on the various products and services, but I couldn’t find
a logical flow to the way in which each technology was
introduced. Imagine taking a beginner’s automotive class
in which the car mechanic opens up the hood of the car
and says, “OK, class, we have spark plugs, an air filter,
timing belt, water pump, pistons, hubcaps… ” but doesn’t
take the time to progress logically through the engine,
or explain how these pieces relate to each other. You
can skip the “overview” in this series; it’s nothing more
than a whirlwind monologue of concepts and lingo presented
too quickly and with no apparent roadmap to let you know
where you’ll end up.
OK, so the introduction bombed, I thought. Let’s see
if the “detail” is any better. After the intro, the instructor
discusses the Win2K installation process and follows this
with a demonstration of an installation. That went smoothly,
though I thought too much time was spent exploring the
minutiae of dialog box options. End of tape one, start
of tape two. Maybe it would pick up from here.
No such luck. The remaining tapes are a lesson in boredom,
with the instructor limited to sitting at his desk, throwing
out numerous concepts, quoting RFCs, and plugging third-party
products. The logic of the discussion escaped me. A minute
counter is shown at the bottom right corner of the screen,
so you can take a break and return to the frame where
you left off. But with no study guide, index, or roadmap,
you’re left wondering where you are in the knowledge-building
process. The instructor limits his demonstration of DNS,
DHCP, Active Directory, and the like by working at two
computers. Configuring two Win2K computers is insufficient
to demonstrate the various configurations required for
a good understanding of these products in a working environment.
I would have suggested producing the video in a classroom
setting with whiteboards to explain concepts and a plethora
of machines to demonstrate the configuration of a multi-domain
environment.
The instructor was technically accurate 99 percent of
the time, letting slip this mistake: “The global catalog
server will contain all the active directory objects and
all object attributes.” In reality, the GC will store
only a subset of the attributes. In another series of
frames he comments that Windows NT 4.0 had to follow the
security concept of AGLP strictly—meaning placing user
accounts in global groups, which are placed in local groups,
which are granted permissions to a resource. But even
in NT 4.0, you could bypass some of these steps and grant
a user or global group direct and explicit permissions
to a resource. While I can forgive these rare technical
mistakes, it’s tougher to dismiss the poorly organized
content.
The instructor offers numerous hands-on demonstrations
of installing and configuring various Windows 2000 services,
namely DHCP, DNS, disk management, setting up a domain
controller, setting up a Dfs root, Terminal Services,
and RAS. But here too the videos fall short. Any MCP can
finagle their way through Microsoft wizards to configure
a service he or she has already been exposed to in NT.
The true challenge lies in teaching these MCPs the nuances
of Active Directory, Group Policy, NT to Win2K planning
and migration, Remote Installation Services (RIS), Internet
Connection Sharing, Knowledge Consistency Checker connection
objects, site link establishment and optimization, and
the Internet Printing Protocol.
Don’t get me wrong—it’s important to learn how the “old
services” work in the new Win2K environment; but with
a limited amount of videotape and attention span, it’s
more important to learn the new features of Win2K. In
other words, this series should have been structured to
not dwell on the old but to delve into the new, explaining
how these new services work and how they integrate with
each other. The instruction should follow up with hands-on
demonstrations that the viewer can perform at the same
time.
The folks at Specialized Solutions didn’t spend a lot
of time on multimedia content; few slides or graphics
show up in the series. Out of the handful shown, one is
technically incorrect, showing a RAID 5 volume with all
the parity data on a single drive instead of staggered
throughout the array. Remember the old saying that the
most important thing in retail business is, “location,
location, location”? In video training, the most important
thing should be “content, content, content.” All you have
to do is watch channels like the Discovery Channel and
the History Channel to know that multimedia content is
paramount in bringing knowledge to the home viewer. This
holds true for computer training as well.
I see a plethora of these “quick-to-market” products
blossoming to fill the need for Win2K training, especially
as upgrade fever reaches its peak. But that doesn’t mean
quality and sound training practices must be sacrificed.
My recommendation? If this is your preferred learning
mode, wait for a video series that offers a more structured
learning format. It should be complete with a guide or
index, true interactive exercises where you as the learner
actively participate, rich multimedia content, and “whiteboard-based”
conceptual instruction. Watching someone sit at a desk
and talk for hours isn’t my idea of fun learning. In today’s
workforce, “on demand” training must have robust content
and be structured to infuse you with excitement about
learning, and techniques to help you retain knowledge.
Simple armchair instruction won’t make the cut in today’s
high-tech training digital production studio.