The P.Eng. Applicant

Introducing PEAK: Practice Evaluation and Knowledge Program

My wife works in a regulated health profession at our local hospital. After becoming a P.Eng., I used to chuckle at her (while she glared at me) each year when she had to spend time both completing and reporting on her continuing professional development activities. Especially because I had no such obligations myself. On the surface, I laughed because “hey, that’s extra work that I don’t have to do”, but when I really thought about it, it made a lot of sense for a professional licensing body to ensure that its existing member base kept their skills up-to-date.

Well, I can laugh no more. The PEO recently announced the creation of PEAK (Professional Evaulation and Knowledge Program) for “ensuring the competence and ethical conduct of license holders”. You can find all the information you need about PEAK here: http://www.peopeak.ca, but I’ll try to provide a TLDR version here.

PEAK is proposed to come into effect in March 2017 and is meant to be completed annually by license holders.

First and foremost, I know what you’re thinking: “This sounds like additional work. Do I have to do it?”. Surprisingly, for the time being the technical answer appears to be “No”. As outlined in the FAQ:

The Act permits PEO to provide continuing education to licence holders; however, it currently does not allow PEO to make continuing professional education compulsory and does not provide PEO with the means to enforce compliance with a mandatory program.

I emphasized the choice of wording (“currently”) because it would seem to suggest that making PEAK mandatory, through an amendment to the Act, is on the PEO’s radar. The FAQ also goes on to state:

While completion of the PEAK program is not mandatory, should a licence holder refuse to complete any element of the program in the allotted time, this information will be publicly noted on PEO’s online directory of practitioners.

So while enforcing PEAK as mandatory is not currently achievable, a public shaming will have to do in the meantime. Let’s assume that, like me, you don’t want an unseemly blemish on your engineering record. The next logical question is: what’s involved in PEAK?

There are 3 key elements:

There you have it. PEAK in a nutshell. If things go as the PEO claims, you’re likely looking at a 20-minute questionnaire + 15-30 hours of professional development + a 1-2 hour writeup. Something to look forward to after you’ve written your experience record. Is it a good thing? I think the motivation is good and, in theory, any licensing body should make sure its membership are keeping their skills up. We’ll have to wait and see how effective PEAK is in this respect. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments!