Question about ISC2 Association

Hello all I am new to this site and I have a question about my resume.
I have the SSCP from ISC2 in full which means I am a member, not an associate.
I also have taken the CISSP and passed (just recently) but I cannot say I have the CISSP because I lack the full five years.
I suppose putting that you are an ISC2 associate on your resume implies that you have the CISSP to an employer.
I am wondering how I can say I have the SSCP as well as an ISC2 Association for CISSP. I was told I cannot mention CISSP anywhere on my resume.
I cant say I have my SSCP as well as I am an ISC2 Associate because I am a member. That just doesnt make sense does it?
Any thoughts?
I have the SSCP from ISC2 in full which means I am a member, not an associate.
I also have taken the CISSP and passed (just recently) but I cannot say I have the CISSP because I lack the full five years.
I suppose putting that you are an ISC2 associate on your resume implies that you have the CISSP to an employer.
I am wondering how I can say I have the SSCP as well as an ISC2 Association for CISSP. I was told I cannot mention CISSP anywhere on my resume.
I cant say I have my SSCP as well as I am an ISC2 Associate because I am a member. That just doesnt make sense does it?
Any thoughts?
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https://www.isc2.org/Certifications/Associate
From that page:
- CISSP - Leadership & Operations
- SSCP - IT Administration
- CCSP - Cloud Security
- CAP - Authorization
- CSSLP - Software Security
- HCISPP - Healthcare Security & Privacy
To become an Associate of (ISC)², you need to take and pass one of the certification exams above.Additionally:
The Associate of (ISC)² designation:
- Makes you much more desirable to employers. Immediately stand out from other job seekers! You show employers you’ve passed a tough exam based on internationally recognized standards. You prove your competence and commitment to the industry.
- Gives you exclusive access to (ISC)² membership — the leading community of information security professionals in the world. And you get amazing benefits: career resources, networking in this elite group of industry leaders and so much more.
To earn our Associate of (ISC)² designation, you need to:Master of Science in Information Security and Assurance - Western Governors University
Bachelor of Science in Network Administration - Western Governors University
Associate of Applied Science x4 - Heald College
SSCP
other cert
cert
cert
They will know your CISSP is associates and that your SSCP is full as long as you tag the associate next to the CISSP. I am sure they will get it or they can spend some time in the interview asking you about it.
Courses: SpecterOps Adversary Tactics: Detection
Certs: AZ-500 (in-progress), MS-500, Pentester Academy - PACES, Pentester Academy - CRTE, OSCP
Pretty certain you can't list it like this if you want to follow their guidelines. Although I doubt anyone would ever care.
If you pass the exam, make sure to link your acclaim digital badge on LinkedIn because it will say this:
[FONT=&]The Associate of (ISC)² status allows an individual to demonstrate competence in the field by passing the rigorous CISSP exam, and work toward gaining the experience required to become CISSP certified. The vendor-neutral CISSP credential confirms technical knowledge and experience to design, engineer, implement, and manage the overall security posture of an organization.[/FONT]
ISC2 probably just doesn't want people getting confused with an Associate not actually being a CISSP because otherwise it doesn't make sense for them to list it on the digital badge.
Resource:
https://www.isc2.org/Certifications/Associate