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Professional Engineering ©2010 Dr. B. C. Paul Note – These notes contain information from National Society of Professional Engineers and the Illinois Society.

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Presentation on theme: "Professional Engineering ©2010 Dr. B. C. Paul Note – These notes contain information from National Society of Professional Engineers and the Illinois Society."— Presentation transcript:

1 Professional Engineering ©2010 Dr. B. C. Paul Note – These notes contain information from National Society of Professional Engineers and the Illinois Society of Professional Engineers

2 Role of Professional Societies Professional Societies try to enhance the value and perception of their services and to keep “snake oil salesman” out  National Society of Professional Engineers holds the Engineers Code of Ethics  Individual Engineering specialties may have their own code Most follow NSPE closely  Societies have the ability to discipline or censure their own members – but limited ability to impose legal penalties

3 The Role of Government Late 19 th century saw governments actively credentialing various profession or worker classes  Idea was to distinguish those people who were truly qualified for certain work from those who were not  Damage being done by unqualified scam artists and the incompetent was becoming obvious

4 Licensure States License Professional Engineers  P.E.’s are given stamps with which to professionally certify designs or drawings  Obtaining Licensure requires Training Time in rank and practice To put some control on practice people coming out with “book learning” they were given a chance for examination and recognition  EIT (Engineer In Training) and successor FE (Fundamentals of Engineering)

5 Recognition Law makers usually do not know enough about professions to check credentials themselves  Created Board Structures of Professionals These individuals have a professional interest in preventing tarnishing of their profession (Occasionally also turned out they had some anti- competitive interests and sense of class elite as well) With time boards have taken on more national scope and states have worked on reciprocity agreements  (Means one state recognizes the licenses granted by another)

6 Why Get Licensure Non-licensed practitioners are limited by law in the scope of work they are allowed to perform.  Increasingly regulators are using licensure as the standard for defining qualified SEC standards are demanding it MSHA with Miner act is starting to demand it  Just expecting someone to rubber stamp your work is unethical  You really have to be working under the PE supervision to get your work stamped

7 Why Licensure Employment – Licensed employees enhance the reputation of engineering firms and become symbols of competency, professionalism, experience, and character. Promotability – Getting licensed demonstrates motivation, responsibility, and success orientation. The same qualities are demanded for positions requiring individual thought, discretion and responsibility. Global Competitiveness – Engineering projects increasingly cross national borders. Most countries require some form of professional licensing and will expect the members of the international team to be licensed in their home countries.

8 How Do You Get Licensed in Illinois? Students who are in their senior year of an accredited four-year engineering program are approved to take the FE exam during their final year in school by filing the appropriate paperwork with the Department of Professional and Financial Regulation.  When you pass the FE exam, you achieve Engineer Intern (EI) status. You must have four years of engineering experience if you graduated from an accredited four-year engineering program  Note why keeping our program ABET accredited is important Take and pass the Principles and Practice of Engineering exam (PE).

9 Test Deadlines In Illinois, the FE and PE exams are offered in April and in October.  the deadline to apply to the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to take the Spring exam is November 15 of the preceding year  the Fall exam deadline is May 15.


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