Twenty-four states now
have mandatory continuing education requirements for professional
engineers. Proponents say these regulations provide an incentive
for practitioners to stay on top of technology and offer the
opportunity to develop skills. But critics worry about the quality
and relevance of course material. "If you start looking
at the content of some commercial programs, they dont
seem beneficial to the profession," says one engineer.
Observers say the growth in the
number of states with continuing education requirements has
slowed from a peak in the middle of the last decade. However,
implementation of these requirements is still "clearly
a trend," says Arthur Schwartz, deputy executive director
of the National Society of Professional Engineers, Alexandria,
Va. "Growth over the last few years has been incremental,"
he says.
Iowa was the first state to require
continuing education for professional engineers in the 1970s.
It remained the only state until Alabama joined it in the
early 1990s.
Many others are ramping up. Missouris
engineers began accumulating credits this year and New Yorks
law will go into effect Jan. 1. At the same time, Maines
voluntary program will become mandatory and North Dakota lawmakers
have passed enabling legislation for its program. Rules now
are being promulgated. Engineers in North Dakota will likely
start accumulating credits as of Jan. 1, 2005.
Regulations in most states generally
adhere to model guidelines for continuing professional competency
drafted by the National Council of Examiners for Engineering
and Surveying, Clemson, S.C. "The goal is to promote
consistency among the various states," says Jerry Carter,
NCEES associate executive director. These model guidelines
require that engineers accumulate 15 professional development
hours each year. One PDH is defined as one contact hour of
instruction or presentation.
The guidelines give engineers considerable
flexibility in satisfying this requirement. Typical acceptable
activities include courses, seminars, in-house programs or
training with engineering content; software instruction; and
management or ethics courses. This flexibility in delivery
method and content is intended to give engineers freedom to
select courses that "will maintain, improve or expand
the skills and knowledge relevant to the licensees field
of practice," according to the guidelines.
"Because engineering is so
broad, the licensee is given flexibility to chose courses,"
says Josephine Emerick, chairman of the professional engineering
division of Missouris licensing board and senior project
manager in the St. Louis office of URS. "It is up to
the individual to chose relevant courses," she says.
Record-keeping is the responsibility
of the licensee, and many engineers registered in multiple
states say that keeping track of the PDHs is not too cumbersome.
Matthew Stuart, senior structural engineer at Schoor DePalma,
Manlapan, N.J., is licensed in 22 states that require continuing
education. "State are flexible enough with the reporting
format so that I only have to fill out one form," he
says.
Many engineers say that they participate
in many more hours of qualifying activities than state regulations
require. And sources seem to agree that the regulations primarily
impact engineers who were not participating in continuing
education. "Most engineers were already keeping up, but
the law benefits those that were not doing continuing education
previously," says James McCarter, chairman of the South
Carolina Board of Professional Engineers & Land Surveyors
and executive vice president at H2L Consulting Engineers,
Greenville.
But sources critical of required
continuing education say it does little to protect the public
or enhance professionals skills. "The only people
that benefit are providers," says Ronald Starling, chair
of Arizona State Board of Technical Registration and principal
of structural engineering firm Starling Associates, Tempe.
Engineering societies, universities
and building product vendors have long been involved in providing
continuing education to construction industry professionals.
To varying degrees, these providers have seen greater demand
for courses as more states have adopted requirements. "There
is no question that the increased number of states [with mandatory
continuing education] is a factor in increased demand,"
says John Casazza, director of continuing education at the
American Society of Civil Engineers, Reston, Va.
ASCE provides continuing education
material in technical and management topics in various formats,
including live seminars, video courses and interactive Web
seminars. It has seen participation in the courses more than
quintuple since the mid-1990s, says Casazza.
Other providers have seen more
modest growth. Since implementation of Minnesotas requirements
in the late 1990s, participation in the University of Minnesotas
programs has grown about 10%, says Lori Graven, program director
for continuing professional education. The Minneapolis-based
university sponsors conferences and seminars on civil engineering
topics throughout the state. "A significant portion of
the profession was already participating," Graven says.
In the last few years, commercial
providers also have entered the continuing education market.
RedVector.com Inc., Tampa, Fla., is one of several providers
that delivers content on line. Founded four years ago with
three employees, the company began by offering courses to
engineers and contractors. It now has 52 employees and a library
of 2,000 courses for eight professions in design and construction.
RedVector.coms courses range
from $23 to $60 per PDH and are an inexpensive alternative
to live seminars, which can cost hundreds of dollars when
travel expenses are included, says Brent Craven, president.
Online course delivery is well-suited to professionals in
rural areas without many live continuing education options,
and those working on projects abroad but licensed in the U.S.,
he says.
Most providers say that state
requirements are not the only factor driving growing demand
for continuing education courses. ASCEs Casazza cites
increasing specialization and rapid advances in technology
as being a big factor behind the desire for more training.
Click
here to view more information regarding continuing education
requirements for professional engineers.
Providers also say that continuing
education can help engineers career development. The
courses can help "meet registration requirements as well
as internal requirements for advancement," says Dave
Raymond, president of the American Council of Engineering
Companies, Washington, D.C. The council offers business and
management courses tailored for engineers. "Engineers
want to take courses to enhance their knowledge base,"
says Raymond.
For firms with in-house education
programs, the main objective usually is the distribution of
the organizations expertise to its employees rather
than fulfillment of state requirements. "The primary
issue is knowledge sharing, continuing education requirements
are secondary," says Tampa, Fla.-based Mark Brewer, director
of PBS&J University.
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| SHARING
THE KNOWLEDGE Employees visit wastewater treatment
plant as part of MWH program. (Photo courtesy of MWH) |
At Broomfield, Colo.-based MWH,
employees can participate in seminars on management, leadership
and technical topics held at its various locations around
the globe. The material from these courses also is available
to employees through the corporate network. Helping employees
satisfy state continuing professional competency requirements
is just a small part of this larger effort. "Part of
our commitment to our employees is helping them keep their
licenses up-to-date," says Betsy Smith Redfern, chief
learning of-ficer.
With growth in course offerings
and providers, some sources worry about the quality of continuing
education materials. "There is a lot of commercialism
as a result of the requirements," says George Tamaro,
a partner at Mueser Rutledge Consulting Engineers, New York
City.
In order to control quality, a
few states, including North Carolina, Arkansas and Florida,
have adopted an approval process for providers. But Florida
is the only state that requires licensees to take courses
from an approved sponsor. Engineers licensed in Arkansas or
North Carolina can take courses from other providers, but
those are more closely examined during audits.
None of the states approve material
on a course-by-course basis. In Arkansas, a prospective provider
submits an application to the board with a course sample.
"We dont have staff to approve each course offering,"
says J.T. Clements Jr., executive director of the State Board
of Registration for Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors.
"To accomplish the true objective of continuing professional
competency, there would have to be review at that level,"
he says.
North Carolinas continuing
education requirements have been in place for almost a decade
and the board is considering changes, says Andrew Ritter,
executive director of the Board of Examiners for Engineers
& Surveyors. In particular, the board is examining its
sponsor approval process, which is similar to that in Arkansas.
"We are looking at tightening down the system,"
Ritter says.
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| EYES
ON ROAD Students observe demonstration in University
of Wisconsin-Madison continuing ed course. (Photo courtesy
of University of Wisconsin-Madison) |
But some providers caution that
a complicated approval process could have a negative impact
on continuing education. "If the approval process is
elaborate, it will reduce the number of providers and the
number of courses available," says Phil OLeary,
chairman of engineering professional development at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison.
North Carolinas Ritter says
the quality of most classes is high. However, he worries about
the few that are deficient. "Although 99 out of 100 classes
are probably great, a bad course damages continuing professional
competency more than anything."
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Groups Continuing Ed Course
Is Tough Love for Engineers
By Debra K. Rubin
Catherine Ellis,
a San Jose, Calif.-based project manager at Kleinfelder
Inc. with a masters degree in civil engineering,
was warned to "take a stiff drink" before
opening the letter containing the review of her training
class proposal. Sri Dinakaran, a project manager in
Dallas for engineer CTL Thompson, was pleasantly surprised
when his submittal came back "only 70% hacked up."
Both engineers not only lived
through the dreaded Fundamentals of Professional Practice
(FOPP) continuing education course offered by ASFE,
a Silver Spring, Md.-based geotechnical engineers
group, but they strongly extoll its practical benefits
to working engineers and their employers.
The once-a-year management
and communication course, split into a proposal phase
and subsequent in-class review and lecture, is a months-long
undertaking that requires participants to meet strict
deadlines and develop a thick skin. In addition to required
readings and exams, students must propose and execute
a research project on a topic that will directly benefit
their firms management or bottom line. Project
results are then presented in front of instructors and
peers for tough critique.
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| BACHNER |
FOPP allows
young engineers to make real-world mistakes early on.
"Often, a project is not intriguing or you dont
like the client. This is the time when professionalism
is most important," says John P. Bachner, ASFE
executive vice president and FOPPs guru.
The course handles no more
than 75 students a year and costs each more than $3,100,
not including travel and time not in the office. Employers
usually pick up the tab and are selective in who attends.
"We send the up and comers," says Gerry Salontai,
Kleinfelder CEO. "If someone couldnt make
it through, it would tell us something." Bachner
says more than 825 engineers have enrolled in FOPP since
1987. Graduates gain continuing education credit, but
not all states recognize nontechnical training, he says.
Surviving Bachners
drill sergeant-like course management is a key hurdle.
He is relentless with critiques of all written submittals,
down to grammar in cover letters and e-mails. "I
mark things up with a red pen until the paper bleeds,"
says Bachner (see sample, below). Face-to-face reviews
are no easier. "There are people still angry at
me after 15 years," he says. But, adds Ellis, "if
you cant spell a word correctly, how do you expect
people to trust your engineering?"
Surviving graduates say the
FOPP experience was "humbling" but has its
benefits. Dinakarans project on CTLs contract
terms has made him a firm expert on the subject. "Its
helped me think a lot more," he says.
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| Bachner
forces students to think and improve communication
skills. |
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