Difference between revisions of "ENG Competency Model"

From SEBoK
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
<blockquote>DAU. 2010. ''SPRDE-SE/PSE Competency Assessment: Employee's user's guide'', 5/24/2010 version. in Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense[https://acc.dau.mil/adl/en-US/406177/file/54339/SPRDE-SE-PSE%20Competency%20Assessment%20Supervisors%20Users%20Guide_DAU.pdf]</blockquote>
+
<blockquote>DAU. 2013. ''SPRDE Competency Model'', 12 June 2013 version. in Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense. [https://acc.dau.mil/CommunityBrowser.aspx?id=657526&lang=en-US]</blockquote>
  
 
==Usage==
 
==Usage==
Line 8: Line 8:
 
==Annotation==
 
==Annotation==
 
There currently is no one accepted 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 U.S. Department of Defense's systems engineering competency model is offered as an example of a national defense organization.
 
There currently is no one accepted 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 U.S. Department of Defense's systems engineering competency model is offered as an example of a national defense organization.
 +
 +
 +
  
 
{{DISQUS}}
 
{{DISQUS}}
  
 
[[Category:Primary Reference]]
 
[[Category:Primary Reference]]

Revision as of 13:41, 26 November 2014

DAU. 2013. SPRDE Competency Model, 12 June 2013 version. in Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense. [1]

Usage

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

Annotation

There currently is no one accepted 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 U.S. Department of Defense's systems engineering competency model is offered as an example of a national defense organization.



SEBoK v. 1.9.1 released 30 September 2018

SEBoK Discussion

Please provide your comments and feedback on the SEBoK below. You will need to log in to DISQUS using an existing account (e.g. Yahoo, Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc.) or create a DISQUS account. Simply type your comment in the text field below and DISQUS will guide you through the login or registration steps. Feedback will be archived and used for future updates to the SEBoK. If you provided a comment that is no longer listed, that comment has been adjudicated. You can view adjudication for comments submitted prior to SEBoK v. 1.0 at SEBoK Review and Adjudication. Later comments are addressed and changes are summarized in the Letter from the Editor and Acknowledgements and Release History.

If you would like to provide edits on this article, recommend new content, or make comments on the SEBoK as a whole, please see the SEBoK Sandbox.

blog comments powered by Disqus