EDUCATION AND TRAINING UPDATE
Any workforce-related inquires (such as on DAU training, DAU course travel orders, certification, Individual Devel- opment Plans, or the Acquisition Career Record Brief) should be submitted through the Workforce Management Inquiry system in the Career Acquisi- tion Management Portal: https://rda.
altess.army.mil/camp/. Once logged into CAMP, click on the “Help Request” button for assistance. Otherwise, open a ticket without logging into CAMP at:
https://rda.altess.army.mil/camp/index. cfm?fuseaction=
support.helpRequest.
DAU provides a list of equivalencies at
http://icatalog.dau.mil/appg.aspx for all courses delivered by DAU and/ or predecessor courses that are consid- ered acceptable toward meeting current acquisition career field certification requirements. To document equivalen- cies accepted by DAU that are obtained from non-Army schools, open a help desk ticket at
https://rda.altess.army.mil/
camp/
index.cfm?fuseaction=support. helpRequest and request that your ACRB be updated to reflect completion of any DAU equivalent courses. On Sept. 4, DAU approved the very first DAU equiv- alent vendor, Trio Consulting LLC, which is accredited to teach BCF 211 – Acqui- sition Business Management. Students interested in taking the BCF 211 DAU equivalent course should apply and con- tact the vendor directly. Trio instructors can bring the course to an organization to teach on-site; contact Trio directly via
www.trio-consulting.com.
BCF 211 is splitting into two courses: BCF 220 (Web) and BCF 225 (class- room). Te transition of BCF 211 – Acquisition Business Management to BCF 220 and BCF 225 starts Jan. 7. DAU has notified students with reserva- tions in classes on or after that date of the change and the requirement to complete the prerequisite course, BCF 220, before attending the resident portion, BCF 225.
Students completing BCF 220 far in advance should review the course mate- rial at least two weeks before the resident BCF 225 course begins, to ensure success- ful completion.
DAU course management has a new pro- cess to allow higher-priority—specifically Priority 1—students first preference in its resident courses. As result, students in Priorities 2 through 5 will be placed on a waiting list for classes showing avail- able seats. Students placed in wait status will roll into a reservation 65 days before the class start date if a Priority 1 student does not encumber a seat. Wait-listed students could still be bumped up to five business days before the class start date if a higher-priority student has applied within 65 days.
Te new process minimizes bumping and allows Priority 1 students to see which courses actually have seats available for them.
190
Army AL&T Magazine
January–March 2013
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