CPD Declaration Dashboard

To satisfy my own curiosity, I recently compared my declared CPD hours with the average CPD hours. For an equivalent Membership Type and EC Type, the average number of CPD hours was 113; however in comparison, the hours I had declared was a paltry 36. I sign up for the seminars and in-house training sessions where my availability allows. My question, borne out of curiosity; what is everyone else doing (which I'm not) to achieve an average of 113 hours within their declared CPD?

  • Thanks Sergio, good idea also. I wasn't sure how everyone else approached their CPDs and hadn't really thought about podcasts.

  • because I want to

    I was thinking after I'd written all the above that this has always been my real motivation for CPD - and indeed for being an engineer - i's just because I'm interested in stuff. So I've never found it a problem justifying CPD time, my frustration (and occasionally in my career my employer's / manager's frustration with me) tends to be the pesky day job getting in the way of wanting to explore the interesting new thing I've just found out!

    The engineers that could struggle are those that see their career as a straight nine to five way of earning enough to retire (which is absolutely fair enough), an occupation rather than a vocation, and I think it's for anyone with that mindset that it's really focussed on - just knowing what you were taught when you were 20 is not going to be good enough when you're 60, or even when you're 25.

  • I tend to find it very difficult to capture on the job training, but as you correctly say, it would probably add up to many hours. Even on a long term project, there is often something new to look at, or a potential process improvement to make (because processes always need refinement).

    But it is remembering to capture those hours which is often the challenge. And often I get stuck on the "well, I'm only doing my day job" aspect.