Four Major Stage 2 Engineers Australia Competency Standards
Are you an engineering professional with a potential Chartered Engineer jumping inside you to come out and work in Australia? if yes, then you must become yourself familiar with the Stage 2 Engineers Australia competency standards.
Now, let’s move a step ahead and know what
it is.
What
is the Stage 2 report of EA competency standards?
The Stage
2 Competency Engineers Australia standards are used by the assessment
authority as the basis of assessment for the designation of CPEng (Chartered
Professional Engineer) and registration on the National Engineering Register
(NER).
Chartered membership is exclusive to
Engineers Australia, which is the assessment authority. This professional
status has recognition from the government, businesses and the general public
all over the world. Achieving this status comes with a career-long obligation
to maintain competency in a chosen practice area.
4
major Stage 2 Engineers Australia competency standards:
The following are the major Engineers
Australia Competency Standards for Chartership Stage 2:
1. Personal
commitment toward the service needs of an engineering professional
2. Following
values at the workplace a professional engineer
3. Showing
technical proficiency as an engineer
4. Community
obligation, as an engineering professional
What
Australia expects from a Professional Engineer:
There are some expectations from an
experienced professional engineer, their ability, and the way they use this
competency and how they will behave. An experienced professional engineer:
Has a clear idea of the requirements of
clients, broad-ranging stakeholders and of society as a whole.
Work to improve social, environmental and
economic outcomes over the full lifetime of the engineering program or product.
Interact influentially with other
disciplines, professions and people.
Ensure that the engineering contribution is
properly integrated into the totality of the project, process or program responsible
for.
Understand technical possibilities for
business, society and government.
Make sure, as much as possible, that policy
decisions are properly informed by possibilities and consequences.
Ensure that costs, limits and risks are
properly understood in the context of the desirable results.
Bring knowledge to bear from different
types of sources for the development of solutions to complicated issues and
problems.
Make sure that technical and non-technical
considerations are properly integrated.
Handle risks as well as sustainability
issues.
Make sure that all aspects of a program,
project or process are soundly based on theory and fundamental principles.
Understand clearly how new developments are
in proportion to established practice and experience and to other disciplines with
which they may interact.
Whereas the outcomes of engineering
generally have physical forms, the work of a professional engineer recognizes
the interaction between people and technology. A professional engineer may do
research related to advancing the science of engineering and developing new
principles and technologies within a wide engineering discipline.
Alternatively, they may play a positive role in educating engineers, continual
improvement in the practice of engineering and devising and updating the
standards and codes that govern it.
So, when you prepare for the assessment of
Engineers Australia competency standards, keep all these things in mind.
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