If you're looking for a variety of
education and training opportunities, consider joining your local Windows NT
user group. User groups are a great way to learn about NT and associated
hardware and software. Volunteers who work with NT daily usually run the
meetings, which provide you with an informal way to meet and swap notes with
other NT users in your area. Because users with various levels of experience and
knowledge attend, user groups are useful for the novice and expert.
Although these groups don't provide formal education, you can hear from
vendors of NT products and services and learn about the latest developments in
the growing NT domain. Each group provides a variety of activities to help
educate its members. Activities vary depending on the members' needs; check with
your local user group for a calendar of events.
Activities
User group activities let you learn about new software features and
functions and plan for future software and hardware implementation. For example,
22 NT user groups in the US and Canada participated in the NT 4.0 Preview Tour
in early 1996. Microsoft sent copies of NT Workstation 4.0 beta software to
attendees.
Some user groups work with a local Microsoft office, and sales engineers
attend meetings to demonstrate products and answer questions. Other vendors come
to show prototypes or beta editions of new products, demonstrate new versions of
products, and solicit user group members' comments. This interaction benefits
both the user group members and the vendors.
A popular segment at many user group meetings is the open
question-and-answer time. Members can ask about NT's features or configurations,
dates for upcoming software releases, or related applications. In response, you
get input from other group members. Questions range from very basic to very
technical.
Support for Training
Many user groups also provide members with training. Often, a user group can
connect you with other members studying to become Microsoft certified or with
local training companies that offer Microsoft certification classes. For
example, the Rocky Mountain Windows NT User Group has chapters in Denver and
Colorado Springs, Colorado. Meeting topics have included Windows NT Domains,
Trusts, and Groups; NTFS File Security; and Windows NT Server Users and Domains.
Microsoft is offering incentives for members in the Rocky Mountain region to
take and pass the Microsoft certification exams. So some members of these user
groups are looking into forming a study group to help prepare for these exams.
Local authorized training companies sometimes host user group meetings at
their facilities and provide a sample of what their courses teach. User groups
often arrange discounts for their members with these training companies, either
on a standing basis or as a one-time offer.
Dr. Roy L. Beasley, vice president for certification for the Advanced
Systems User Group (ASUG) in Washington, DC, is working on a cooperative program
between ASUG and Howard University. In October 1994, ASUG suggested that the
Distance Learning Lab (DLL), a component of Howard University's Continuing
Education Program, organize a self-study group for local computer professionals
interested in becoming MCSEs. For the next 18 months, the group met for two to
three hours a week to study the Microsoft Press NT Workstation and NT
Server self-study guides and the Windows NT Resource Kit.
Microsoft recently recognized Howard University's continuing education
program as an AATP. Accordingly, the DLL is reorganizing the study group's
weekly sessions into official Microsoft courses. Group members who are MCSEs or
MCPs will teach these sessions. The user group charges a modest $100 tuition for
the next two sessions: NT Workstation and TCP/IP. These courses
will meet once each week for 10 weeks.
User groups offer many advantages for very little cost to members. Some
groups have low annual dues, and some have none. In either case, user groups are
a wonderful training resource. To find a user group near you, check the user
groups listing on page 78 or check the Windows NT Magazine Web
page at http://www.winntmag.com.