I'm looking at the New Mexico Web page (which is pretty similar to a couple of other states that require PDH's that I've looked at) and they award credit for the following types of activities:
- Active participation in seminars, courses, in-house programs, workshops, training, professional conventions, correspondence or videotaped courses (1 hour=1PDH)
- Successful completion of college courses (1 semester hour=45 PDH, 1 quarter hour=30 PDH)
- Successful completion of courses offering CEU credit (1 CEU=10PDH)
- Teaching or instructing above courses/activities for the first time only (1 hour = 2 PDH)
- Authoring a published paper, article, or book (10 PDH)
- Active participation in professional and technical societies (each orginization, 2 PDH/year)
- Each patent (10 PDH)
- 1 yr subscriptoin to technical journal (1 PDH, max 2 PDH)
- 1 hour of literature review (1 PDH, max 6 PDH)
- Each civic or community activity (1 PDH, max 4 PDH)
The list has some qualifiers at the bottom, one that applies to the discussion above is "Presentations by Product/Equipment Vendors & Plant/Factory Tours are eligible only if: - Presentations are of a technical nature and not just a sales demonstration; and - part of a formal training session; not normally obtained in the course of licensee's work". That says pretty clearly that having a vendor bring in donuts and a tech speil is legitimate PDH's.
Seems like eng-tips would fit nicely into the next to last category, I'd document the time just like you do vehicle mileage - with a log.
This list seems to have enough latitude to allow anyone to persue professional development in the way that best fits their personal learning style and needs. The requirement is 15 hours/year reported every other year. In the last 6 months I've documented 31 PDH's. Don't think 30 will be a problem.
Dirtguy4, the ones that go to "anger management" for PDH's are the guys that used
Cliff Notes and asked to "borrow" your homework in college. Other than the fact that you'll eventually be working for them, they aren't worthy of your consideration.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.