General SFIA training syllabus
General SFIA Training is available at Foundation, Practitioner and Consultant Level.
The SFIA Foundation accredits three levels of General SFIA Training:
- Introduction to SFIA for Consultants
- Introduction to SFIA for Practitioners
- Foundation Level Training
With the exception of the Foundation Level training, the training below should be supported by exercises and opportunities for discussion and questions. Training may be provided by any appropriate means - face-to-face workshop format is not mandatory.
Attendance prerequisites
There are no prerequisites for SFIA training. Individuals will benefit from first understanding SFIA, in order to use SFIA for personal skills or career development.
SFIA training will help those in business, technology or people functions to use SFIA for skills management. To get full benefit, attendees should have some familiarity with:
- The essential nature and responsibilities of the roles in their organisation
- Typical people and skills related activities, e.g.,
- Recruitment
- Deployment
- Job descriptions/profiles
- Assessment
- Personal development
- Reward
- The difference between skills and knowledge
- The ways in which skills can be developed in the workplace
- The importance of people and skills strategy
Learning outcomes
Having attended a course, an attendee should be able to do the following:
Outcome |
Foundation |
Introduction for Practitioners |
Introduction for Consultants |
|
---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Understand the underlying idea of SFIA |
Y |
Y |
Y |
2 |
Understand the structure of SFIA |
Y |
Y |
Y |
3 |
Determine the skills needed in a particular situation, job or assignment, and determine the level at which the skills are required |
Y |
Y |
|
4 |
Locate the required skills in SFIA |
Y |
Y |
|
5 |
[In their own area of expertise] use SFIA to analyse the reasons behind an individual’s performance, and determine appropriate development measures |
Y |
Y |
|
6 |
Able to assess the SFIA skills of an individual |
Y |
Y |
|
7 |
Know what is and what is not allowed by the SFIA end user licence, and advise colleagues accordingly |
Y |
||
8 |
Understand SFIA’s seven levels and relate them to an organisation’s own levels |
Y |
||
9 |
Advise management on appropriate ways to exploit SFIA |
Y |
||
10 |
Understand the benefits of using SFIA |
Y |
||
11 |
Prepare a business case for an organisation’s use of SFIA |
Y |
Course content
The course should have the following content:
Deccription | Foundation |
Introduction for Practitioner |
Introduction for Consultant |
|
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Introduction and background |
|||
1.1 |
Course administration, introductions of course members |
Y |
Y |
Y |
1.2 |
Why and how SFIA was developed; its regular updates |
Y |
Y |
Y |
1.3 |
The SFIA Foundation – how it works: Accredited individuals and organisations |
Y |
Y |
Y |
1.4 |
Availability of SFIA information & point to Website |
Y |
Y |
Y |
1.5 |
SFIA Licencing SFIA - Introduction |
Y |
Y |
Y |
1.6 |
SFIA Licencing SFIA - Details |
|
Y |
Y |
|
||||
SFIA in context |
||||
2.1 |
Reasons for implementing SFIA and benefits to be obtained |
Y |
Y |
Y |
2.2 |
Capability management cycle: processes relating to various aspects of skills management. |
Y |
Y |
|
2.3 |
Typical problems, how SFIA helps |
Y |
Y |
|
2.4 |
Attributes of IT professionals |
Y |
||
2.5 |
Skills portfolio |
Y |
||
|
||||
SFIA Skills |
||||
3.1 |
Overall concept of the framework |
Y |
Y |
Y |
3.2 |
Structure of the framework; skills categories and subcategories |
Y |
Y |
Y |
3.3 |
The nature of SFIA skills: the way they are described; their significance |
Y |
Y |
|
|
||||
SFIA Levels |
||||
4.1 |
Concept of the seven levels; their consistency |
Y |
Y |
Y |
4.2 |
How the levels are defined generically: the five characteristics of a level |
Y |
Y |
Y |
4.3 |
The uses of the generic levels |
Y |
Y |
|
4.4 |
How specific skills map on to the levels |
Y |
Y |
|
4.5 |
The structure of a SFIA skill descriptor |
Y |
Y |
Y |
4.6 |
Skills in relation to people; and in relation to jobs |
Y |
Y |
|
The practicalities of using SFIA |
||||
5.1 |
Overview of implementation; nature of the implementation project |
Y |
Y |
|
5.2 |
The use of role profiles |
Y |
Y |
|
5.3 |
Mapping career progression lines; professional and technical development |
Y |
||
5.4 |
Contribution to resource planning |
Y |
Y |
|
5.5 |
Capability development plans; using SFIA skills as development metrics |
Y |
||
5.6 |
Using SFIA to determine requirements for personal development planning |
Y |
Y |
|
5.7 |
Recording areas and levels of knowledge (avoiding confusion with SFIA) |
Y |
||
5.8 |
Approaches to assessment |
Y |
||
5.9 |
Assessing SFIA Skills |
Y |
Y |
|
5.10 |
Information available from the SFIA Foundation - encouraging attendees to login to obtain a download |
Y |
Y |
Y |
|
||||
Wrap up |
||||
6.1 |
Review of Learning Objectives |
Y |
Y |
|
6.2 |
Feedback |
Y |
Y |
|
6.3 |
Encourage attendees to register on the SFIA Website as personal or corporate |
Y |
Y |
Y |
|
||||
Exercises and discussions |
|
|
||
E.1 |
Discuss how your organisation might use SFIA - can be part of introduction and revisited |
N/A |
O |
O |
E.2 |
Example: Creation of a Role Profile |
N/A |
O |
O |
E.3 |
Example: SFIA in Recruitment |
N/A |
O |
O |
E.4 |
Example: Extracting SFIA Skills from a CV |
N/A |
O |
O |
E.5 |
Example: Assessing the SFIA skills of an individual |
N/A |
O |
O |
E.6 |
Example: Others as appropriate? |
N/A |
O |
O |