BCS Professional Certification

The BCS Professional Certification, formerly the Information Systems Examinations Board (ISEB), is a software testing qualifications board and a part of British Computer Society.

Initially started as a collaboration between the National Computing Centre (NCC) and BCS for the creation of the Certificate in Systems Analysis and Design for the then-Systems Analysis Examination Board (SAEB). In 1989 a new qualification in Project Management was developed. This was the start of an expansion of the portfolio of qualifications and therefore the Systems Analysis Examination Board made the decision to change its name to Information Systems Examination Board (ISEB). In 2012, this was repositioned as the BCS Professional Certification.[1]

Overview

BCS qualifications cover ten major subject areas in IT:[2]

The qualifications are available in various levels:

  • Foundation Level – broad introduction to a discipline.
  • Practitioner Level – practical application within a specific discipline.
  • Higher Level – in depth coverage within a specific discipline for specialists or managers.

BCS qualifications and exams are available internationally in 50 countries including Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Africa, and Brazil.

BCS Professional Certification offers qualifications via accredited training and examination providers and may be undertaken via both written and computer based examinations.

gollark: You could probably do something like that.
gollark: The ceramic server almost certainly isn't big enough of a dataset to train from scratch, nor do they have the GPUs for that, presumably.
gollark: The base GPT-2 models can do that. So if they finetuned one and didn't accidentally erase all its previous knowledge, it should also do that.
gollark: Generally they can manage to use basically-correct grammar and spelling, even if the semantics are wrong.
gollark: The bot doesn't actually display the coherence you'd expect from a GPT-2-based thing, so I'm not sure how much it's actually being used.

References

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