Certified Software Development Professional

Certified Software Development Professional (CSDP)
Established2002 [1]
Websitecomputer.org/certification

Certified Software Development Professional (CSDP) is a vendor-neutral professional certification in software engineering developed by the IEEE Computer Society for experienced software engineering professionals. This certification was offered globally since 2001 through Dec. 2014.

The certification program constituted an element of the Computer Society's major efforts in the area of Software engineering professionalism, along with the IEEE-CS and ACM Software Engineering 2004 (SE2004) Undergraduate Curricula Recommendations, and The Guide to the Software Engineering Body of Knowledge (SWEBOK Guide 2004), completed two years later.

As a further development of these elements, to facilitate the global portability of the software engineering certification, since 2005 through 2008 the International Standard ISO/IEC 24773:2008 "Software engineering -- Certification of software engineering professionals -- Comparison framework" [2] has been developed. (Please, see an overview of this ISO/IEC JTC1 and IEEE standardization effort in the article published by Stephen B. Seidman, CSDP. [3] ) The standard was formulated in such a way, that it allowed to recognize the CSDP certification scheme as basically aligned with it, soon after the standard's release date, 2008-09-01. Several later revisions of the CSDP certification were undertaken with the aim of making the alignment more complete. In 2019, ISO/IEC 24773:2008 has been withdrawn and revised (by ISO/IEC 24773-1:2019 [4]).

The certification was initially offered by the IEEE Computer Society to experienced software engineering and software development practitioners globally in 2001 in the course of the certification examination beta-testing. The CSDP certification program has been officially approved in 2002. [1] After December 2014 this certification program has been discontinued, all issued certificates are recognized as valid forever. [5] [6] A number of new similar certifications were introduced by the IEEE Computer Society, including the Professional Software Engineering Master (PSEM) and Professional Software Engineering Process Master (PSEPM) Certifications (the later soon discontinued).

To become a Certified Software Development Professional (CSDP) candidates had to have four years (initially six years) of professional software engineering experience, pass a three-and-half-hour, 180-question examination on various knowledge areas of software engineering, and possess at least a bachelor's degree in Computer Science or Software Engineering. The CSDP examination tested candidates' proficiency in internationally accepted, industry-standard[7] software engineering principles and practices.[8] CSDP credential holders are also obligated to adhere to the IEEE/ACM's Software Engineering Code of Ethics and Professional Practice.[9] [10]

History

The IEEE Computer Society introduced the CSDP in 2002, and on October 27, 2008, it became the first certification to conform to ISO/IEC 24773 standard for software engineering certification.[11]

Determination of eligibility

Candidates had to undergo a peer review of their education and professional qualifications in order to receive authorization to take the CSDP examination. Candidates therefore had to submit an application to the IEEE Computer Society that provided verifiable information regarding their educational background and professional experience.

The Certified Software Development Associate (CSDA) certification was available to graduating students and early-career software professionals who did not meet the eligibility requirements for the CSDP. [12] [13]

CSDP examination content

The CSDP examination content was based on the Guide To The Software Engineering Body of Knowledge. The examination covered content from all primary knowledge areas in the SWEBOK Guide Version 3. Below is a list of the topics tested in terms of their proportion of the total examination.[14]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b IEEE Computer Society Board Of Governors Meeting Minutes, 8 Feb. 2002  - Certification program official approval
  2. ^ ISO/IEC 24773:2008 "Software engineering -- Certification of software engineering professionals -- Comparison framework", 2008-09-01, ISO/IEC, 2008, vi+7 pp.
  3. ^ Stephen B. Seidman, "Software engineering certification schemes", Computer, May 2008, pp. 87-89
  4. ^ ISO/IEC 24773-3:2019 "Software and systems engineering -- Certification of software and systems engineering professionals -- Part 1: General requirements"
  5. ^ IEEE Computer Society Board Of Governors Meeting Minutes, 18 Nov. 2014, article 18.  - Certification program discontinuation, perpetual validity of all issued certificates.
  6. ^ IEEE Computer Society Board Of Governors Meeting Minutes, 30 Jan. 2015, article 18.  - Certificates valid perpetually regardless of the IEEE Computer Society membership.
  7. ^ "ISO/IEC TR 19759:2005". ISO. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
  8. ^ "Guide to the Software Engineering Body of Knowledge". IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
  9. ^ IEEE-CS/ACM Software Engineering Code of Ethics and Professional Practice.
  10. ^ Don Gotterbarn, Keigh Miller, Siimon Rogerson, "Computer Society and ACM Approve Software Engineering Code of Ethics," Computer, Oct. 1999, pp. 84-88
  11. ^ Details of ISO Accreditation
  12. ^ CSDA Beta Exam information, 2007 Certified Software Development Associate (CSDA)
  13. ^ CSDA/CSDP information, 2009
  14. ^ CSDP Candidate Bulletin, 2011

This page was last updated at 2020-12-23 10:35 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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