See title; I’m considering it, but the courses bundles are expensive
I’m currently on the RHCSA path myself, and I can tell you that the courses are not worth the thousands that Red Hat charges. There are plenty of unofficial video courses on YouTube and Udemy and study guides and practice tests on GitHub that are free or cheap, and other resources for every individual study topic, which will be good enough.
However, though I can’t speak from experience, it seems like the cert itself will look good enough on a resume to justify the investment of $500 and a month of studying.
Is it something you cannot learn by yourself or the certification is valuable for your career?
Is the RHCSA worth it?
I don’t know. What’s the RHCSA? Let’s check the description. Maybe they’ll explain.
See title
Hmm… :/
It depends on what you’re getting it for and why. Also, never pay for training and certifications, especially the pricey ones. It should be your employer paying for it.
For sure, my company is willing to pay for it, I wouldn’t be paying for it myself.
I just don’t want to work with windows anymore, and every job I get is windows centric; therefore I get a small amount of linux experience on my resume and the cycle continues. I’m contemplating getting the RHCSA and the RHCSE in order to get linux-centric roles (because although I’m down to take a cut in pay and settle for a junior position, most of the jobs available seem to be for senior or mid-level positions).
Have you considered the cheaper LFCS (Linux Foundation Certified Sysadmin) instead? It might be easier for the company to “swallow” and it’s more general Linux instead of mainly Red Hat based. I took it this year and it’s pretty standard System Administrator stuff.
If it’s free, why not.
Will it help you get a job? I’ve never hired anyone based on a certification, because it doesn’t mean experience. Experience is what gets people hired.
Doctors don’t get hired without first doing a residency. Mechanics don’t get hired because they know all the parts on a car. And I won’t get hired by a law firm for simply scoring 99% on an LSAT.