I have often stated that here in Canada P.Eng status is necessary to be an engineer and to practice in any case. There is neither industrial exemption nor are there any exams, as you know them in the US. (There is a brief Professional Practice exam but that is simply an exercise to make sure that you have read the Engineering Act and the Code of Ethics.)
The closest thing we have to an industrial exemption is if you are an employee of the federal government, you do not require registration. That is because the various engineering acts are provincial and the federal Crown is not bound by the laws passed by provincial and municipal governments. However the vast majority of the federal government engineers, myself included for 15 years, are P.Eng’s.
Entry to the profession is gained through graduation from an accredited university, 4 years experience, attendance at a professional development series and references from existing engineers. Our technologists, your Bachelor of Engineering Technolog, are almost always excluded from entry to the profession. They normally go back to university or have a series of up to 22 exams. The exam route is very rare.
I do not really understand the reliance on exams for entry into the profession. To base, in large part, the entry to the profession on 16 hours of test taking cannot really satisfy the aims of professional licensing. The material covered by the FE exam should have been taught in the undergraduate curriculum. Anyone who can pass the requirements for an engineering degree should have that knowledge. Why not use 4 years of educational experience and trust the universities to produce academically qualified people?
To use the PE exam as the standard for entry has in my opinion two fundamental flaws. The first is that performance on a multiple guess exam, where you have the right answer in front of you is a poor proxy for professional competence. The sample exam questions I have seen are along the line of how much flow will this pipe carry. The real professional problem is how much flow capacity do I need, how can I provide this in a long term cost effective and safe manner? Calculating the flow in one case is such a small part of the normal professional problem that the exam does not really test the professional competence of the individual.
The second problem is that the profession is simply too broad and diverse for any examination system to keep up with the developments in the profession or to be capable of adequately testing the knowledge of everyone in the profession. I see numerous examples of this in these forums. The aerospace say that the exams are not relevant, the electronic controls say that the EE exam is heavily slanted to power production etc.
The main hurdle for an EIT to pass is to get references from other P.Eng’s. The provision of letters of reference is something that is taken very seriously by both the association and the individual engineers. The ones that I have sent in have been as complete and as honest as I can make them. (I have provided negative recommendations for people who I did not feel had the character and experience to become engineers and they were declined entry for a while.)
What is a better indicator of suitability, an 8-hour exam or the personal knowledge of an established professional who has known and supervised and reviewed the work of someone for up to 4 years or more?
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion