CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners is a 3-day course that gives you focused training for the challenges you'll face as you work toward CMMI maturity level 2. Unlike any other course the SEI offers, CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners meets your needs at a specific maturity level--something our more than 100,000 Introduction to CMMI students have requested.
A follow-on to the Introduction to CMMI v1.2 course, this new course gives you a deeper understanding of maturity level 2 practices and the purpose behind them. CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners prepares you to help guide your organization’s process improvement efforts and to participate in a SCAMPI appraisal. Some specific skills you'll develop include the following:
Although this course is designed for individuals, CMMI Level 2
for Practitioners can equip your team to drive your organization to
CMMI maturity level 2. In addition to the benefits your project members
will receive as individual practitioners, the format of this course
makes it possible for a group of engineers from a specific organization
to work on scenarios and issues unique to their work environment.
CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners uses a hands-on approach to teach you to overcome the hurdles you'll encounter as you move toward maturity level 2. With a limited amount of lecture time, the course allows you to explore real-world scenarios and how to solve them.
Take your training to the next level: CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners [pdf]
CMMI Level 2 for Practitioners
February 16 - 18, 2010 (SEI Arlington, VA)
March 2 - 4, 2010 (SEI Frankfurt, Germany)
May 11 - 13, 2010 (SEI Pittsburgh, PA)
September 8 - 10, 2010 (SEI Pittsburgh, PA)
CMMI Level 3 for Practitioners
April 14 - 16, 2010 (SEI Arlington, VA)
July 13 - 15, 2010 (SEI Frankfurt, Germany)
August 17 - 19, 2010 (SEI Pittsburgh, PA)
December 1 - 3, 2010 (SEI Pittsburgh, PA)
In 1984, the Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute (SEI) was established as a federally funded research and development center (FFRDC) to advance software and systems engineering principles and practices. The SEI is the only FFRDC dedicated to the software engineering field. It has spent the past 25 years identifying, developing, and advocating practices for developing high-quality software. The SEI bases its curriculum on this rich body of research and experience with software-reliant systems.