[nycphp-talk] About Formalizing an Enterprise PHP and thePHP+Developer
Tim Lieberman
tim_lists at o2group.com
Wed Apr 23 22:23:39 EDT 2008
Following up on my own post, just to be clear -- I think a certification
exam for web developers is impossible. And/or the fact that you know PHP
inside and out doesn't make you worth anything on a real project. You
can't reduce the breadth and complexity to a multiple-choice test. Such
a setup is too easily gamed.
What might be interesting would be some kind of jury system. If there
were a 4-ish person jury consisting of, I dunno, Steve Manes, Tom
Riemer, Jack Slocum, and Chris Corbyn , who would review a bunch of
"thesis-like" stuff you put together, and then hop on a chat and
interrogate you for an hour before saying "yeah, this guy/gal is pro or
slow" -- then I might pay attention to that, when hiring you.
So who wants to help recruit some recognizable names, and start selling
"shots" at such a cert. Maybe 3 or 5 $k to sit in front of the jury ...
I mean, you've got to pay these juries well. These are busy people.
-Tim
Tim Lieberman wrote:
> Certifications about particular technologies are dumb, unless there's
> a certain amount of built-in complexity that justifies them (or not,
> but I don't know what Cisco certifications are like, etc). PHP is a
> small enough system that it doesn't warrant it.
>
> Any competent programmer can become satisfactorily proficient in a
> language in less than two weeks (assuming the language is of a common
> langauge class -- C to lisp is hard. Perl or C to php is simple.
> Also see C++ to Java, PHP to ColdFusion, Java to C#, etc). Given two
> or three months, that programmer who gained some proficiency can
> become fairly expert.
>
> If you want a certification, it should be wider.
>
> As someone who's in a position to hire, I'd love to see a really
> strong certification that I could count on. This would require
> conceptual knowledge, not particulars about a language.
>
> I want someone who can (among other things):
>
> - Administer UNIX-like servers. Including some basic understaning
> of package management, and also (especially?) compiling from source.
> - Can at least make their way around a windows/IIS type system.
> - Understands version control systems (for me, CVS + SVN, but you'd
> probably need to understand VSS in the cert exam).
> - Knows how to program. Understands how to optimize (and when).
> Understands recursion.
> - Has a good knowledge of object-oriented things. - Knows their
> way around major design patterns (MVC, Singletons, Factories, and so on)
> - Understands SQL -- you might be a PHP-expert, but if you're
> writing bad SQL your app will suck (unless it eschews SQL entirely --
> how often does that happen).
> - Understands XML parsers.
> - Understands some common XML-based standards (SOAP, RSS)
> - Knows how to write a cron job that will actually work.
> - Can manually interact with an SMTP server (via telnet)
>
> Knowledge of PHP's syntax just simply pales in comparison to the
> importance of this stuff. PHP is *easy* to learn if ... wait for it
> ... you know how to program your way out of a paper bag.
> ($bag.exit();? exit($me,$bag);? $this.parent = null;? ... maybe it's
> harder than I thought ... getting claustrophobic!)
>
> All this stuff (together) is hard to test for, and it's hardly an
> exhaustive list. It's also just the start of the list that *I* want
> -- some people might not care about version control, for instance.
>
> But a much better place to start, IMO, is not a PHP certification, but
> some kind of overall web-development certification.
> I care a LOT more about a candidate having a good understanding of
> relational databases than I do about them understanding PHP. I also
> want my subordinates to be clear on good semantic markup, and have a
> good, solid understanding of Javascript (these days).
>
>
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