Rebrand DevNet
imho - This is not a CCNA level as per the content of the CCNA 3 class, Enterprise Networking, Security and Automation (ENSA), 14. 5.3, "We are rapidly moving away from a world where a network administrator manages a few dozen network devices, to one where they are deploying and managing hundreds, thousands, and even tens of thousands of complex network devices (both physical and virtual) with the help of software. This transformation is quickly spreading from its beginnings in the data center, to all places in the network."
CCNA is for networks with user in the hundreds, not with thousands of networking devices. That is why this has always been a mismatch in the academy.
I'd relabel and position the course as a "practical" programming or experience class to further skills, but not an entry level networking class.

Thank you for the suggestion. We have passed this information on to the Product Management team.