Difference between revisions of "NASA's Systems Engineering Competencies"

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<blockquote>Complete Bibliographic Entry</blockquote>
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<blockquote>Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership (APPEL). 2009. ''NASA's Systems Engineering Competencies''. Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Association. Available at: [https://appel.nasa.gov/career-development/competency-models/systems-engineering-competency-model/ https://appel.nasa.gov/career-development/competency-models/systems-engineering-competency-model/].</blockquote>
  
Please note: bibliographic entries should follow Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed.).  Please see [http://www.bkcase.org/fileadmin/bkcase/files/Wiki_Files__for_linking_/BKCASE_Reference_Guidance.pdf BKCASE Reference Guidance] for formatting.
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==Usage==
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This source is considered a primary reference for the following articles:
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*[[Roles and Competencies]]
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*[[Assessing Individuals]]
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*[[Developing Individuals]]
  
 
==Annotation==
 
==Annotation==
A primary reference has been identified as the author team as a "key" reference, which is critically important to understanding a given topic. Each article will define a set of no more than 5-10 primary references. The general concept is that if a SEBoK user were to read the article on a topic and the Primary References, he or she would have a firm grasp on the principle concepts related to that article.
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There currently is no one systems engineering competency model that is globally applicable and accepted widely within the discipline of systems engineering.  To the contrary, the topic on [[Roles and Competencies]] has shown the best practice is for an organization to develop its own systems engineering competency model after evaluating its own needs with its stakeholders, organization, and workforce and within the context of its complete environment, e.g., economic, social, political. Nevertheless, the process of developing an organization's systems engineering competency model can be greatly informed and aided by evaluating the systems engineering competency models of other publicly available models. Consequently, the NASA systems engineering competency model is offered as an example of an organization that performs systems engineering projects on earth and space exploration, technology development, and scientific research.
  
'''All primary reference pages will follow these guidelines:'''
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<center>'''SEBoK v. 2.10, released 06 May 2024'''</center>
*Article title is the title of reference.  This may be the title of the book, article, etc.
 
*First item listed will be the complete bibliographic reference.  Please see [http://www.bkcase.org/fileadmin/bkcase/files/Wiki_Files__for_linking_/BKCASE_Reference_Guidance.pdf BKCASE Reference Guidance] for descriptions and examples of complete references.
 
*All primary reference articles will contain a 1-2 paragraph annotation with a description and explanation of value for the related topic(s).
 
 
 
'''Authors submitting primary references are responsible for providing the bibliographic entry and annotation.'''  If multiple authors use the same primary reference, ''each'' author must explain the value proposition to a user for that resource in terms of his/her own topics.  In this instance, there will be a heading for each article. 
 
 
 
EXAMPLE:  If this is a primary reference for three articles, the below will be:
 
 
 
===Article 1===
 
Annotation for Article 1.
 
 
 
===Article 2===
 
Annotation for Article 2.
 
 
 
===Article 3===
 
Annotation for Article 3.
 
  
 
[[Category:Primary Reference]]
 
[[Category:Primary Reference]]

Latest revision as of 23:00, 2 May 2024

Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership (APPEL). 2009. NASA's Systems Engineering Competencies. Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Association. Available at: https://appel.nasa.gov/career-development/competency-models/systems-engineering-competency-model/.

Usage

This source is considered a primary reference for the following articles:

Annotation

There currently is no one systems engineering competency model that is globally applicable and accepted widely within the discipline of systems engineering. To the contrary, the topic on Roles and Competencies has shown the best practice is for an organization to develop its own systems engineering competency model after evaluating its own needs with its stakeholders, organization, and workforce and within the context of its complete environment, e.g., economic, social, political. Nevertheless, the process of developing an organization's systems engineering competency model can be greatly informed and aided by evaluating the systems engineering competency models of other publicly available models. Consequently, the NASA systems engineering competency model is offered as an example of an organization that performs systems engineering projects on earth and space exploration, technology development, and scientific research.

SEBoK v. 2.10, released 06 May 2024