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7#
楼主 |
发表于 2008-11-14 14:32:33
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只看该作者
Someone in this thread mentioned the lack of trust that would be given
to a Doctor that was not certified. To that, I will respond: If you
doctor sat through a two and a half day course and wrote a multiple
choice exam to get his certification, would you then trust him? I
think not. Certification requirements for testing jobs are usually a
requirement due to HR staff that don't know anything about software
testing and the requirement becomes a way to filter resumes.
Unfortunately, this eliminates some very skilled talent from their
search pool.
Depending on some locales, it may near impossible to get an interview
for a job without one of these BS certifications. If so, then I
understand the need to get the certification to get a job. In North
America, it would be much better for the field to refuse jobs that
require the certifications altogether (though there are plenty of jobs
that are easy to get without them). If a prospective employer
requires this certification, they will not be receiving a resume from
me.
To those that say they provide a standardisation of the terminology:
So what? Terminology will change with every new job, and sometimes
different project teams. If you want to spend a lot of money for
someone to "Standardise" your language, I think you would be wasting
your money. The testing field is often hurt by certified (and
uncertified) testers who need to enforce the "right" terminology,
testing technique, report template, process, etc on the rest of the
development team. Testing is a service provided to many different
stakeholders on a project and it is up to the test team to adapt, not
enforce.
If you really want to become a better tester, there are plenty of
places to improve your knowledge and skills. Plenty of books, blogs,
and groups out there that can help you out. If you are a fresher (or
have been testing for a while but want to improve your skills), I
highly recommend the FREE (yes, free. No strings attached), Black Box
Software Testing Course (BBST) created by Cem Kaner and James Bach
(http://www.testingeducation.org/BBST/). While certifications may
introduce some terminology and techniques at a very high level, the
BBST course will cover this material as well as teach you to apply the
techniques and become a better thinker about testing. When I'm
looking for staff, certification on a resume often makes me wary of
their true skills as the behavioral and technical parts of the
interview are often of low value for these testers (I get a lot of
buzzwords, but no in depth understanding of them, often a complete
misuse of the terms). I will take an uncertified, untrained fresher
if they can demonstrate a thirst for knowledge and come across as
completely honest.
Get your foot in the door as a tester, work hard on your skills and
knowledge and certifications will not be a neccesity on your resume to
get an interview. If in your part of the world, it is a neccesity to
have the certification, then take hte certification for what it is, a
means of getting interviewed. But please don't think because you are
certified that you can stop learning, thinking and analysing your
skills. You will be a better tester for it.
Regards,
-b |
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