The link below is to one of the various companies offering online courses to earn the credits necessary to maintain NICET certification. The great thing about Jensen Hughes is that they actually offer one basic course for FREE. You earn one credit and you get a feel for what the rest of the courses are like.
The necessity to continually earn credit hours seems like a noble cause, you want educated and skilled people designing systems that may one day save a life. But to think for the next 20, 30, 40 years you will need to find ways to earn these credits seems nearly impossible. How many different ways are there to continue to earn these credits while working in the field full time already? I believe this side of NICET Certification is very much about the money and not so much about the level of expertise.
Now, I don't want to sound like I am whining when it comes to earning the extra 18 hours needed if you've actively worked full time for the 3 year certification period, but unfortunately the company I work for has lost its most experienced designers to other companies... So I no longer have the group of professionals just across the hall to seek advice from. And, as stated in my first post, I'm not finding any easy answers online.
Check out the course below, it is not timed. There are short review sessions in between the course sections. And for being such a basic subject, it was actually very useful to refresh myself on some of the subject matter. Once completed you have access to review the courses whenever you want and upon receiving a passing grade you receive a printable certificate for the credit hour.
https://www.jensenhughesacademy.com/catalog/product/sprinklers_fire_behavior_introduction_to_fire_suppression
I've created this page in the hopes that other entry level, to moderately experienced, sprinkler systems designers can find some useful information that I myself have found to be seriously lacking despite the vast expanse of information available on this thing we call "THE INTERNET."
Thursday, January 26, 2017
To start, I'm a NICET Level 2 designer. Certified in Water Based Systems Layout. I began working as a fire suppression designer in February of 2007. I passed my level 1 test in November of 2008 and my level 2 test in October of 2009. I have yet to venture into Level 3... but we're not getting into the reasons for that just yet... My Level 1 and 2 testing were on the now outmoded WORK ELEMENT format.
I've created this page in the hopes that other entry level, to moderately experienced, sprinkler systems designers can find some useful information that I myself have found to be seriously lacking despite the vast expanse of information available on this thing we call "THE INTERNET."
It may take some time to post everything (though not much) I'd like to share with other young designers looking for an inexpensive way to gain knowledge and prepare for NICET certifications, but I genuinely want this to help you find the information that you have been unable to locate yourself without spending money blindly hoping what your paying for is what you get... because sometimes you have no idea what you're actually paying for.
I've created this page in the hopes that other entry level, to moderately experienced, sprinkler systems designers can find some useful information that I myself have found to be seriously lacking despite the vast expanse of information available on this thing we call "THE INTERNET."
It may take some time to post everything (though not much) I'd like to share with other young designers looking for an inexpensive way to gain knowledge and prepare for NICET certifications, but I genuinely want this to help you find the information that you have been unable to locate yourself without spending money blindly hoping what your paying for is what you get... because sometimes you have no idea what you're actually paying for.
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