I'm sure this has all been discussed before (with much more flair and depth than I'm capable of) but one of the hurdles in developer certification that appears most obvious to me is that our industry contains so much variety.
Variety is probably not the best word for it, but what I mean is that the developer who is creating an application for monitoring nuclear reactors is probably going to need to be much more thorough than another developer who's just setting up a custom blog for a popular band. There are wide areas inside the industry that require different levels of talent and detailedness. Although I'm Zend certified, I think that such certifications are really quite useless (I felt I had to get the certification just so I could say that without sounding like a hypocrite). It proves very little except that the developer is good at taking tests and memorizing material. There *might* be a way to develop a test that creates a valid stamp of approval, but I have yet to see it. Again, the problem comes back to the variety inherent to the industry. One test can't encompass it all. You've got medical app devs that need to be familiar with HIPAA regulations, financial app devs that need to be familiar with Sox, and front-end guys that need to have familiarity with UI principles... I could go on, but I shan't. - Brian On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 8:27 AM, Urb LeJeune <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It's another thread but, should there be certification available for > programmers and web designers? If we > ever want to be considered a profession, that's the first step. I was in > the stock brokerage business when > the designation Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) first came into being. It > was extraordinarily difficult > and it took almost two years after the announcement before the first > designation were awarded. It required > two 8 hour day testing sessions. It made a huge difference in the industry > and these days you will not get > a senior level job in a research department without a CFA. Same thing > happened with Chartered Financial > Planner (CFP). > > I'm unsure of the procedure, but how/when does one change the subject when > we have drifted into a new > area? > > > > Urb > > Dr. Urban A. LeJeune, President > E-Government.com > 609-294-0320 800-204-9545 > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > E-Government.com lowers you costs while increasing your expectations. > > > _______________________________________________ > > New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online > http://www.nyphpcon.com > > Show Your Participation in New York PHP > http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php > -- realm3 web applications [realm3.com] freelance consulting, application development (917) 512-3594 _______________________________________________ New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online http://www.nyphpcon.com Show Your Participation in New York PHP http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php
