Roy Pemberton:
I can also confirm that, as he says, there is no way a junior engineer would succeed in an application for I.Eng.
I will reiterate what I've previously said on many occasions, an I.Eng is most definitely not a junior engineer, even with the new, clearer specification set out in the 4th edition. Frankly, the bulk of those carrying out a solid, professional engineering job, even at very senior level, fit the I.Eng profile, and that is a healthy proportional situation for any profession. It may be a stepping stone to C.Eng, but it may be as far as many people want to (or should) go.
This is a Level 6 Apprenticeship. On completion the apprentice will have fully satisfied the requirements for registration as an Incorporated Engineer by the relevant professional engineering institution."
I would assume some will finish a degree apprentice aged 22 or 23. I'm no way denigrating the abilities or competencies of those finishing these apprenticeships but I'm of the opinion they are probably still going into business at a Junior Engineer level.
Similarly in the 4th Edition of UKSpec in relation to project management:-
IEng
3. Contribution to project and financial planning and management together with some responsibility for leading and developing other professional staff
CEng
3. Responsibility for financial and planning aspects of projects, sub- projects or tasks
4. Leading and developing other professional staff through management, mentoring or coaching.
'Contribution to project and financial planning and management' would probably not be a project manager whereas 'Responsibility for financial and planning aspects of projects, sub- projects or tasks' would be.
Alasdair Anderson:
Now my plea - this thread is supposed to be about UK-SPEC Edition 4 and there is a separate thread dealing with the recognition (or not) and value of IEng. Can we please use this thread to discuss the changes to UK-SPEC.
Well we can try, but I think so far pretty much most views seem to agree with yours that it sort of looks ok but it's difficult to tell and we'll need to see how it works in practice, except for Peter whose views are expressed in his original post.
Funnily enough I was just thinking about the new layout, because I've been asked to give an internal presentation on it at work, and the new layout is actually much easier for that. And in 3rd edition I most often found myself using the "three side by side section" which of course was landscape already.
My feeling is still very much that it's gentle evolution rather than revolution, absolutely the litmus test will be when panels start applying it...but I do think the examples are a bit better now, the old examples (for all grades) sometimes felt like they only applied to the technical director of ICI!
Cheers,
Andy
Roy Bowdler:
As I said earlier, for most people on a CEng pathway with an accredited degree under their belt and a supportive employer, UK-SPEC is a pretty minor issue, similar in purpose to a course prospectus offering some structure to your learning ahead of the “final exam”.
Hi Roy,
Just for once I'd have to disagree with you a bit here - my experience with applicants over the past couple of years is that you need considerably more than an accredited degree and a supportive employer to gain CEng, and although 4th edition should allow more engineers to obtain CEng (who personally I thought should have been able to obtain it under 3rd edition, but as we know the word "innovation" carried too much weight in that edition) my reading of the two is that 4th edition still squarely puts the majority of graduate engineers in the IEng camp. And that's fine.
I've just had a careful read through of all the competences for 3rd and 4th edition for IEng and CEng. Really interesting. The IEng competences are basically completely unchanged. The CEng competences are very different. If one wanted to, one could say that IEng has stayed the same and that technical competences for CEng have been downgraded! But I'd hope they will be seen as being broadened rather than eroded - the "and/or" statements in there now are hugely important.
What I hadn't spotted before is that the management competences for CEng have been increased. That's very very very annoying. Worth others here looking through the C competences to get their impressions. The silly thing is that the commentary recognises that in matrix organisations (which I suspect most of us work in to some extent these days) potential CEngs probably won't have direct management responsibilities, but then the competences themselves seem to require exactly that! Ah well, as per my previous post I'd better get ready to hand my CEng back since I for one don't meet these any more...actually that's really ironic that the CEng management competences are possibly now rather higher than the CMgr competences! Bother, just I was thinking this was a good standard.
Grumpf.
Andy
Andy Millar:I've just had a careful read through of all the competences for 3rd and 4th edition for IEng and CEng. Really interesting. The IEng competences are basically completely unchanged. The CEng competences are very different. If one wanted to, one could say that IEng has stayed the same and that technical competences for CEng have been downgraded!
What I hadn't spotted before is that the management competences for CEng have been increased.
I'd agree that the A/B competencies have been loosened, particularly A2, B1 and B2.
I'm not convinced at all that C competencies have changed significantly. C1 and C2 are re-worded but look equivalent. C3 has been extended from just leading teams to "lead teams or technical specialisms". This I think is a positive move as the 3rd edition tended to make things difficult for the SME type of engineer.
C4 is broadly the same although "quality" has been removed, which I think is a mistake, but ultimately not significant.
Tim
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