Hmm.. I'd recommend not going that route, not that training place anyway. The problem is if you have 0 experience in networking that trying to shovel feed that much info down you throat in the time they are claiming is next to impossible. They might teach you how to take the tests but that is it. Even if you manage to do that then you will still not really have an idea what you are doing but you will just have some letters after your name.
Look at the times they quote, 8 nights for 2000 professional and server combined, that just really isn't enough time unless you already know the product and are pretty much taking a course just so you can ace the exams. And the CCIE in 40 hours? From what I understand the CCIE has a 5% passing rate out of people that go for it, and it is very expensive just to go take the test in the first place, there is no way you can do 40 hours of instruction and go for the CCIE it would be like throwing money out a window.
My suggestion would be find a local community college and see what they have to offer, some places might have a crappy program but the one near me was very good. I was able to learn a lot of the stuff quite well over a period of time for a really reasonable price. I took the mcse in 98 or 99 through one, I even had some experience already but we had in class time of over 380 hours over 4 months of work there, plus time in study groups and at home. But when I finished I felt a lot more comfortable with the material than someone who had just studied the answers for a week or 2 and went in and passed.
The best bet really is knowing someone and getting a foot in the door somehow and getting them to pay for training after that. The sad part is that is getting harder and harder to do in this market. I spent awhile on the phone yesterday talking to a recruiter, not even one that is searching for me but just a friend so he was being totally straight up with me and let me tell you it is a way different market now than it was 2 years ago, or even one year ago. Not to scare you but just being honest.
Edit: just double checked, it is 40 hours for the CCNA and CCNP and 72 for the CCIE, small point cause either is too short but wanted to make sure.