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APEGA Professionalism and Ethics . Best profession Solid foundation Opens many doors technical & non-technical national & international My background. Unlock the Potential. Skill Set Required. Technical Learning Problem-solving Communication Leadership Integrative.
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APEGA Professionalism and Ethics
Best profession Solid foundation Opens many doors technical & non-technical national & international My background Unlock the Potential
Skill Set Required • Technical • Learning • Problem-solving • Communication • Leadership • Integrative
Impact on Society • Engineers, geologists and geophysicists contribute big time to the Alberta Advantage • $18 billion in revenues generated • Thousands of jobs created • Expertise among the best in the world
Impact on Society • Engineers, geologists and geophysicists impact many aspects of public welfare • Resource Industries • Manufacturing • Communications • Transportation • Water & wastewater • Power • Construction
Trust of and Respect from Society • Esteemed position • Education gives you skills and knowledge that most can’t understand • Public must trust your judgement • If you meet the public’s expectation, the public will respect you • Generally expected to behave to higher standard
Control the Quality • Regulated • Impact • Trust • Focus capabilities on areas that benefit society and protect the public interest • Set up bodies to regulate
What is APEGA? • The Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta • Your Professional Association • Mandatory membership/licensure • Not a Technical Society
APEGA’s Authority • The Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act • Privilege of self-governance • Right to title • Exclusive scope of practice • Defines practice • APEGA’s role • Governance
Legal Definition • The practice of engineering is defined as: “reporting on, advising on, evaluating, designing, preparing plans and specifications for or directing the construction, technical inspection, maintenance or operation of any structure, work or process; a) that is aimed at the discovery, development or utilization of matter, materials or energy or in any other way designed for the use and convenience of man, and b) that requires in the reporting, advising, evaluating, designing, preparation or direction of the professional application of the principals of mathematics, chemistry, physics or any related subject, or c) teaching engineering at a university”
APEGA’s Role • Protect the public interest by regulating the practice of the professions by: • Registering/licensing qualified members • Establishing practice standards • Administering a complaint and discipline process • Encouraging professional development • Reviewing member and corporate practice • Stopping those not qualified from practicing and using the title
Vision We will be a valued agent of excellence in professional practice and an internationally respected leader of the engineering and geoscience professions.
Mission We serve the public interest by regulating the practices of engineering and geoscience in Alberta, by providing leadership for our professions and by upholding members in their professional practices
Guiding Principles APEGA is guided by the following principles: Self Regulation: ongoing self regulation of the professions benefits the public and the professions Public Interest: the protection of the public is paramount in all that we do Professionalism: skilled and ethical practice is provide by our members Relevance: value is delivered to our members and stakeholders Trust: our professional reputation and ability to serve society is founded on earned public trust Fairness: everyone is treated fairly, and with dignity and respect Transparency: processes are fair, impartial, and accountable to members and the public Comm & Consult: input from members and other stakeholders is continually sought, valued, incorporated and reflected
Public Interest • physical • health • financial • environment • socio-economic
Non-regulatory Activities Public Involvement: • University student liaison • Student outreach (K-12) • Sponsorship of student competitions • Awards & scholarships • Communications (media & advertising) • National Engineering & Geoscience Month activities
Non-regulatory Activities • Member Services: • Committee work • Compensation survey & Job Board • Member recognition – Summit Awards • Professional development opportunities • Mentoring • Group Purchase Discounts • The PEG
APEGA Student Advantage Program (ASAP) • No Cost • Employment Advantage • Financial Advantage • Purchasing Advantage • Professional Advantage • No obligations
National Context Engineers Canada
A National Voice • Engineers Canada is an umbrella organization • Engineers Canada represents 234,000 professional engineers • Unlike provincial associations, it has no authority • Facilitates the setting of uniform national standards, works with Federal Government and acts on behalf of the professions on international issues
Canadian EngineeringAccreditation Board • Sets standards of engineering education in Canada • Measures universities against those standards • Issues accreditation if standards are met • Ensures graduates meet the academic requirements for registration by the provincial associations
Canadian EngineeringAccreditation Board • Programs must ensure that students are: • exposed to appropriate technical skills • made aware of the role and responsibilities of the professional engineer in society • exposed to ethics, human rights, public and worker safety, health considerations and the concepts of sustainable development and environmental stewardship
Professionalism What does the word “professional” mean to you? • tradesman – did professional job • professional athlete • Professional Engineer
What is a Profession? A calling requiring: • specialized knowledge • intensive preparation • Continued study • high standards • good judgement • leadership • ethical conduct* • duty to protect the public interest*
Ethics What is it?
Ethics • Differentiate between good and bad, between right and wrong • More than just moral values instilled by parents or church • Most associations develop codes of conduct • Establish duties which are practical and enforceable • Experience will dictate how to handle issues when two codes appear to be in conflict
Ethics (cont’d) • Codes govern the nature of relationships with: • society • employer • client • colleagues • employees • the profession
APEGA Code of Ethics Preamble: Professional Engineers and Geoscientists shall recognize that professional ethics is founded upon integrity, competence, dignity, and devotion to service. This concept shall guide their conduct at all times
APEGA Code of Ethics Rules of Conduct: Professional E & G’s shall 1. in their areas of practice, hold paramount the health, safety and welfare of the public, and have regard for the environment 2. undertake only work they are competent to perform by virtue of their training and experience 3. conduct themselves with integrity, honesty, fairness and objectivity in their professional activities
APEGA Code of Ethics 4. comply with applicable statutes, regulations and bylaws in their professional practices 5. uphold and enhance the honour, dignity and reputation of their professions and, thus, the ability of the professions to serve the public interest
Registration- Five Criteria for Licensure Professional Practice Exam Good Character And Reputation English Language Competency Experience Experience Academics
Experience: Quantity • 4 years required • At least one year equivalent North American engineering experience – in most cases this means one year Canadian engineering experience
Experience: Quality- the 5 elements • Application of Technical Theory • Practical Experience • Development of Management Skills • Development of Communication Skills • Development of the Understanding of Societal Implications