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Measuring LAMP Competency?

An anonymous reader writes "Our company is getting ready to hire a number of programmers. While the majority of the prospective candidates do have good-looking resumes, we are looking to see if we can get some clear metrics in the assessment process. After a little research we have learned that there is a well-established PHP + MySQL training and certification process, and some of the candidates are already certified. There is also a candidate with a good portfolio, a lot of experience, and no certification. Most of the applicants also have some college/university science-related education. So our goal is to be able to somehow measure LAMP overall competency as well as basic computer science concepts such as BNF, data normalization, OOP, MVC, etc. How do Slashdot readers go about this kind of characterization?"

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  1. Re:No faith by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's a pretty bold assertion. I assert that it is not true.

    Although... most certifications are entry level. They only say that you've read the material, have done some practice and have a basic understanding of the theory. They *try* to test for experience, but the Cisco, Microsoft and Linux certs can be passed without experience. I've written others, but I've seen few certs which contradict this.

    Intermediate industry certifications mimic designations. They require nomination/sponsorship and years of experience, also point systems to maintain certification. They're much harder to fake.

    All of these certifications make a reasonable minimum requirement. That's all. Most people I've met who are anti-cert seem to be resentful that they'd have to study material to acquire product knowledge in an area they've never seen, nor expect to see. Those people of course are missing knowledge. Maybe it's relevant to their jobs, maybe it's not. They'll never know, and they might spend weeks trying to figure out some problem because they don't know the capabilities of the software/tool/product.

    Now I have to get back to work fixing some device which was deployed by some self-taught boob who didn't adhere to best practices for the device... probably because they used the default configuration without knowing what the defaults were. They of course moved on, and are probably telling people that certifications don't matter...