![]() ![]() You can put whatever you want in your application. Many were because the experience was labeled internship which flagged review, and the time line was scrutinized. The provider I work with used actual rejected applications. When I recently did the train the trainer program for the updated exam, we were walked through the online application program and instructed how to assist in filling in the application, including how to write the project description and experience. Previous application submissions didn’t work this way and this is why the audit process existed, and still does. This year there is an indication they are even going to add a plagiarism AI. When an application is submitted currently, there is a check on the value fields. Until then, we'll have to agree to disagree. The biggest reason I'm pursuing this conversation is that if I'm wrong, and someone were able to show me where PMI says that, it would mean I've been giving out misinformation and I would change what I'm telling people. I haven't seen anything on the website that says that. I'm asking for the official statement from PMI that says the 36 months of experience has to come after the four year degree, or it doesn't count, that you said you have. ![]() I'm not asking for your training materials. Was it that they lacked the total requisite number of months including their experience before finishing their degree, or was it that the experience they had did not demonstrate a sufficient breadth of project management experience? But, I had over 5 years experience as a full time project manager. I had around 18 months experience, post 4 year degree, when my application was approved. Using your logic, I shouldn't have been approved. Granted, I don't know all of them, but I've worked with a few and been through PMI "train the trainer" training. But you are the only person claiming to be a PMI certified instructor (I'm assuming that means your either an ATP or work for one) that I've heard say the experience has to come after the degree. If I'm wrong, then I've learned something new and I'm better for it. "I have PMI branded materials that state otherwise." You can't submit it until you've met their criteria, and this would be a simple thing to validate during the application process. ![]() If that were the case, why would someone even be able to submit their application. There are no stipulations on the website or application about the experience having to come after getting the degree. The website states, in more than one place, that with a four year degree you need 36 months of experience within the past eight years. Was that the reason stated for the rejection? Did the applicant have actual project management experience prior to completing their degree, and a minimum of the years experience within the required timeframe? "I have seen applications rejected with less than three years experience post four year degree. My current role and company has recently turned in an undesirable yet unavoidable direction, but am a few months short of the certification requirements, and was curious to see if I needed to wait these additional months before applying or whether I could use applicable client-based projects from my time at school. Would these be applicable to this requirement, considering they are months of project experience for an actual client that would directly improve their business, or do I need to actively be employed/outside of education for these months to count? Within my undergraduate and graduate education, a number of my courses were solely semester-long projects in which we would have to locate a client that we could fulfill specific projects for. ![]() I know that depending on level of education, a certain number of months of project experience is required. I appreciate everyone's help in advance, as I have searched the requirements page on PMI's website but came up short. ![]()
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