Visit the Meco Shaft Seals web site
Click on the advert above to visit the company web site

Product category: Trade Associations and Standards
News Release from: ISA:Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society | Subject: Certified Automation Professional
Edited by the Processingtalk Editorial Team on 23 September 2005

Helping to define the automation
profession

Request your FREE weekly copy of the Processingtalk email newsletter. News about Trade Associations and Standards and more every issue. Click here for details.

As the organization that sets the standard for automation, the ISA signature certification programme - Certified Automation Professional - will play a critical role in the future of the industry

As the organization that sets the standard for automation, the ISA signature certification programme - Certified Automation Professional (CAP) - will play a critical role in the future of the automation industry The CAP programme represents the first certification for the automation field

As the first step in the development of the programme, ISA completed a feasibility study to survey the market regarding the proposed certification.

The CAP feasibility study supported the concept of worker differentiation through certification in the automation field.

According to the employers surveyed, 77% believed certification would enhance recognition and respect for individuals working in the field.

64% of the employer respondents agreed that salary, remuneration, and benefits should increase for certified automation professionals.

The job study analysis, released in 2004 as part of the programme, also marked a significant milestone - for the first time, the industrial automation field was distilled into its basic functions.

The analysis also served to validate the CAP exam and ensure that the CAP exam questions accurately tested the skills and knowledge that automation professionals need to be effective.

Jim Henderson, Executive Vice President of the Psychometric Department at Castle Worldwide, oversaw the job study analysis for the CAP programme.

As he explains it, "Job tasks can be grouped together in very general areas of responsibility called domains.

Then for each task there would be knowledge and skill lists associated with it".

As we began developing the CAP programme, we created a panel of experts to develop such a list of domains associated with the automation field.

Castle took the resulting list and surveyed 217 professionals and manufacturers to determine the importance of each task in today's manufacturing environment.

The list of six "domains of practice" that the CAP panelists identified was.

1 Feasibility Study - Identify, scope, and justify the automation project.

2 Definition - Identify customer requirements and complete high-level analysis of the best way to meet those requirements.

3 System Design - Prepare the complete conceptual design of the control and information systems including specifications of the hardware and software to be used in the system.

4 Development - Software development and coding.

5 Deployment - Field installation, and checkout and startup of the systems.

6 Operation and Maintenance - Long-term support of the system.

The survey that produced the results detailed in the job analysis study asked respondents to rank each of the six tasks in terms of its importance, "or the degree to which knowledge in the domain is essential to the minimally competent practice of [industrial automation]," criticality, "or the degree to which adverse effects (of some type) could result if the certified automation professional is not knowledgeable in the domain," and frequency, or, "the percent of time the certified automation professional spent performing the duties associated with each domain".

When the respective rankings done by the expert panelists and the respondents were compared, the analysis revealed that both groups ranked System Design as the most important, critical, and frequently applied domain.

The Job Analysis Study has a direct influence on the CAP exams because, having validated that the exams will test job-relevant competencies, the study provided a blueprint for test developers mapping out how many of the exam's 175 items would cover each of the six domains.

According to the test blueprint laid out in the Job Analysis Study, System Design will account for 24.94% of the test, which is a plurality at 44 test items.

Operation and Maintenance, which the survey respondents consistently ranked near, or at, the bottom of each scale, will only account for 10.95%, or 19 test items.

If you're interested in reading the entire report, which includes a more detailed distillation of these statistics, you can download the CAP Job Analysis Study from the ISA website.

The report is free for current ISA Members, and costs $150 for non-members.

ISA:Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society: contact details and other news
Email this article to a colleague
Register for the free Processingtalk email newsletter
Processingtalk Home Page

Search the Pro-Talk network of sites

Visit the Meco Shaft Seals web site