Greetings,
Greetings,
The short answer is Yes.
Ultimately, the Engineering Councils UK-SPEC standard (which all registration bodies must adhere to) states you need to have an the equivalent accredited Bachelors degree for IEng and a for CEng, an accredited integrated Masters degree or a combination of accredited Bachelors and Masters degrees.
There are many people who apply for professional registration with non-accredited qualifications and are successful. It's just a case of having your education recognised as equivalent.
As for structuring your CPD, I'd suggest looking at the UK-SPEC competencies and seeing if you have any weaker areas for which there could be an activity that would help with it. The IET does provide help with that: Professional Registration - Help (theiet.org).
I'm not a PRA for the IET (but I am for another institution) but I'm sure one of the IET PRAs will comment on this.
Good luck,
Mark
I'm not a PRA for the IET (but I am for another institution) but I'm sure one of the IET PRAs will comment on this.
Yes, very happy to!
First, and really really important thing: You do not need a degree to become a Chartered Engineer. Every year I help almost as many non-graduates become Chartered as I do graduates. What a degree does often do is help you get an interesting job (and that will help you get Chartered), but only if it's a degree, and a job, that you're actually interested in.
So I'd always suggest turning this around: think about what type of engineering you enjoy (including potentially in an area which you have a non-work interest in) and what type of people you want to work with. Use your experiences in your apprenticeship to think about which of the teams you work with you want to join. Talk to them to find out which subjects it would be useful to learn about to help get there. Concentrate on those areas in your studies (whether degree based or any other opportunities to learn).
You've then got the best possible chance of doing well in your engineering career. And if you do well in your engineering career you can get the appropriate registration status - including Chartered. What's very often misunderstood is the professional registration is based on the competences you show in your day-to-day work. Provided you show those competences then it doesn't matter what your educational background is. It does mean that you may need to put slightly more evidence on your form if you have a non-accredited degree - but it's not a good idea to spend 4 years and many many thousands of pounds just to save you one day's worth of writing!!
https://www.theiet.org/media/5502/11-professional-registration-myths-apr-2020.pdf
What it is definitely worth doing is to look at job adverts in the area you might want to end up working in and see what actual employers are asking for. That's much more important.
Very best wishes for an enjoyable and profitable career,
Andy
I'm not a PRA for the IET (but I am for another institution) but I'm sure one of the IET PRAs will comment on this.
Yes, very happy to!
First, and really really important thing: You do not need a degree to become a Chartered Engineer. Every year I help almost as many non-graduates become Chartered as I do graduates. What a degree does often do is help you get an interesting job (and that will help you get Chartered), but only if it's a degree, and a job, that you're actually interested in.
So I'd always suggest turning this around: think about what type of engineering you enjoy (including potentially in an area which you have a non-work interest in) and what type of people you want to work with. Use your experiences in your apprenticeship to think about which of the teams you work with you want to join. Talk to them to find out which subjects it would be useful to learn about to help get there. Concentrate on those areas in your studies (whether degree based or any other opportunities to learn).
You've then got the best possible chance of doing well in your engineering career. And if you do well in your engineering career you can get the appropriate registration status - including Chartered. What's very often misunderstood is the professional registration is based on the competences you show in your day-to-day work. Provided you show those competences then it doesn't matter what your educational background is. It does mean that you may need to put slightly more evidence on your form if you have a non-accredited degree - but it's not a good idea to spend 4 years and many many thousands of pounds just to save you one day's worth of writing!!
https://www.theiet.org/media/5502/11-professional-registration-myths-apr-2020.pdf
What it is definitely worth doing is to look at job adverts in the area you might want to end up working in and see what actual employers are asking for. That's much more important.
Very best wishes for an enjoyable and profitable career,
Andy
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