WGU D316
IT Foundations
Complete Study Guide for CompTIA A+ Core 1
Current 220-1201 Alignment
Domain Approx. emphasis
1. Mobile Devices 13%
2. Networking 23%
3. Hardware 25%
4. Virtualization and Cloud Computing 11%
5. Hardware and Network Troubleshooting 28%
Purpose: An original learning resource for mastering the concepts and troubleshooting habits assessed in D316 and A+ Core
1. It is not an official WGU or CompTIA publication and contains no real exam questions.
Version note: WGU materials indicate that D316 prepares learners for A+ Core 1 and currently recognize both 220-1101 and 220-1201 in transfer
guidance. Confirm the exam code shown in your WGU course portal before scheduling. This guide prioritizes 220-1201.
Prepared July 2026
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 1
, How to Use This Guide
Core 1 rewards recognition, comparison, and disciplined troubleshooting. Do not merely memorize acronyms. For each
technology, be able to identify it, explain what problem it solves, select it for a scenario, and diagnose common failures.
• First pass: read every domain and mark unfamiliar terms.
• Second pass: rebuild the port, connector, memory, storage, wireless, printer, and troubleshooting tables from memory.
• Third pass: answer the original practice questions without notes; explain why every wrong option is wrong.
• Final review: focus on symptoms, first steps, safety, and the least disruptive solution.
Universal troubleshooting method: 1) identify the problem; 2) establish a theory; 3) test the theory; 4) establish and
implement a plan; 5) verify full functionality and apply preventive measures; 6) document findings, actions, and outcomes.
Preserve data and safety at every stage.
Recommended 14-day plan
Days Focus Output
1-2 Mobile devices Connector and component recall sheet
3-5 Networking Ports, protocols, Wi-Fi and SOHO configuration
6-8 Hardware Build-selection drills and storage/memory tables
9 Virtualization/cloud Model comparison and resource scenarios
10-12 Troubleshooting Symptom-to-cause decision trees
13 Mixed practice Timed questions and error log
14 Weak areas Teach-back and final readiness check
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 2
, Domain 1 - Mobile Devices
Mobile-device questions test component identification, accessory selection, wireless connectivity, and replacement
procedures. Always power down, disconnect power, use ESD protection where appropriate, and consult vendor
documentation before disassembly.
Laptop components and replacement
Component Key facts Typical symptom
Battery Lithium-ion/polymer; internal or removable. Swelling is a safety hazard: Short runtime, unexpected shutdown,
stop using the device. failure to charge
Keyboard/touchpad Often connected by delicate ribbon/ZIF cables. Missing keys, erratic pointer, no input
RAM SODIMM; generation and speed must match platform support. No POST, instability, low-memory
performance
Storage 2.5-inch SATA SSD/HDD or M.2 SATA/NVMe depending on slot. No boot device, slow access, SMART
warnings
Wireless card M.2 card with antenna leads; note lead position before removal. Weak/no Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
Display assembly Panel, bezel, hinges, webcam, microphone, antenna, backlight Dim, flickering, cracked, lines/artifacts
circuitry.
DC jack/USB-C Loose jack or failed PD negotiation can prevent charging. Intermittent or no charge
power
Fans/heat sink Dust and failed thermal interface reduce heat transfer. Overheating, throttling, shutdown
Display diagnostics
• A faint image visible with a flashlight suggests a backlight or power-circuit problem, not necessarily a failed LCD matrix.
• Artifacts on both internal and external displays point toward GPU/driver/system issues; a clean external display points
toward the laptop panel or display cable.
• Intermittent image when moving the lid commonly implicates the display cable near the hinge.
• OLED pixels emit light directly; LCDs rely on a backlight. OLED offers strong contrast but can be vulnerable to burn-in.
Mobile connectors and accessories
Technology Use/recognition
USB-C Reversible connector; capability varies. May carry USB data, DisplayPort Alternate Mode, Thunderbolt, and
USB Power Delivery. Connector shape alone does not guarantee speed/features.
Thunderbolt High-speed data, display, docking, and power; modern versions commonly use USB-C connector.
Lightning Apple proprietary connector used on older iPhones/accessories.
NFC Very short-range tap interactions: payments, pairing, tags.
Bluetooth Short-range peripherals, audio, tethering, PAN.
Hotspot/tethering Shares cellular data over Wi-Fi, USB, or Bluetooth.
Stylus/digitizer Pen input; active models may support pressure, palm rejection, and batteries.
Docking station Expands ports, monitors, Ethernet, storage, and power through one connection.
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 3
IT Foundations
Complete Study Guide for CompTIA A+ Core 1
Current 220-1201 Alignment
Domain Approx. emphasis
1. Mobile Devices 13%
2. Networking 23%
3. Hardware 25%
4. Virtualization and Cloud Computing 11%
5. Hardware and Network Troubleshooting 28%
Purpose: An original learning resource for mastering the concepts and troubleshooting habits assessed in D316 and A+ Core
1. It is not an official WGU or CompTIA publication and contains no real exam questions.
Version note: WGU materials indicate that D316 prepares learners for A+ Core 1 and currently recognize both 220-1101 and 220-1201 in transfer
guidance. Confirm the exam code shown in your WGU course portal before scheduling. This guide prioritizes 220-1201.
Prepared July 2026
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 1
, How to Use This Guide
Core 1 rewards recognition, comparison, and disciplined troubleshooting. Do not merely memorize acronyms. For each
technology, be able to identify it, explain what problem it solves, select it for a scenario, and diagnose common failures.
• First pass: read every domain and mark unfamiliar terms.
• Second pass: rebuild the port, connector, memory, storage, wireless, printer, and troubleshooting tables from memory.
• Third pass: answer the original practice questions without notes; explain why every wrong option is wrong.
• Final review: focus on symptoms, first steps, safety, and the least disruptive solution.
Universal troubleshooting method: 1) identify the problem; 2) establish a theory; 3) test the theory; 4) establish and
implement a plan; 5) verify full functionality and apply preventive measures; 6) document findings, actions, and outcomes.
Preserve data and safety at every stage.
Recommended 14-day plan
Days Focus Output
1-2 Mobile devices Connector and component recall sheet
3-5 Networking Ports, protocols, Wi-Fi and SOHO configuration
6-8 Hardware Build-selection drills and storage/memory tables
9 Virtualization/cloud Model comparison and resource scenarios
10-12 Troubleshooting Symptom-to-cause decision trees
13 Mixed practice Timed questions and error log
14 Weak areas Teach-back and final readiness check
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 2
, Domain 1 - Mobile Devices
Mobile-device questions test component identification, accessory selection, wireless connectivity, and replacement
procedures. Always power down, disconnect power, use ESD protection where appropriate, and consult vendor
documentation before disassembly.
Laptop components and replacement
Component Key facts Typical symptom
Battery Lithium-ion/polymer; internal or removable. Swelling is a safety hazard: Short runtime, unexpected shutdown,
stop using the device. failure to charge
Keyboard/touchpad Often connected by delicate ribbon/ZIF cables. Missing keys, erratic pointer, no input
RAM SODIMM; generation and speed must match platform support. No POST, instability, low-memory
performance
Storage 2.5-inch SATA SSD/HDD or M.2 SATA/NVMe depending on slot. No boot device, slow access, SMART
warnings
Wireless card M.2 card with antenna leads; note lead position before removal. Weak/no Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
Display assembly Panel, bezel, hinges, webcam, microphone, antenna, backlight Dim, flickering, cracked, lines/artifacts
circuitry.
DC jack/USB-C Loose jack or failed PD negotiation can prevent charging. Intermittent or no charge
power
Fans/heat sink Dust and failed thermal interface reduce heat transfer. Overheating, throttling, shutdown
Display diagnostics
• A faint image visible with a flashlight suggests a backlight or power-circuit problem, not necessarily a failed LCD matrix.
• Artifacts on both internal and external displays point toward GPU/driver/system issues; a clean external display points
toward the laptop panel or display cable.
• Intermittent image when moving the lid commonly implicates the display cable near the hinge.
• OLED pixels emit light directly; LCDs rely on a backlight. OLED offers strong contrast but can be vulnerable to burn-in.
Mobile connectors and accessories
Technology Use/recognition
USB-C Reversible connector; capability varies. May carry USB data, DisplayPort Alternate Mode, Thunderbolt, and
USB Power Delivery. Connector shape alone does not guarantee speed/features.
Thunderbolt High-speed data, display, docking, and power; modern versions commonly use USB-C connector.
Lightning Apple proprietary connector used on older iPhones/accessories.
NFC Very short-range tap interactions: payments, pairing, tags.
Bluetooth Short-range peripherals, audio, tethering, PAN.
Hotspot/tethering Shares cellular data over Wi-Fi, USB, or Bluetooth.
Stylus/digitizer Pen input; active models may support pressure, palm rejection, and batteries.
Docking station Expands ports, monitors, Ethernet, storage, and power through one connection.
WGU D316 IT Foundations - Independent Study Guide Page 3