RAA In Practice | Code of Conduct Bingo | NSW ARB
Wednesday 1st October 1pm – 2.30pm
This 1.5 hour session offers 1.5 formal CPD points, performance criterion addressed is 1 from the AACA National Standard of Competency for Architects 2021. It is designed to be completed LIVE and will not be recorded.
Tickets are $35, though RAA members are eligible to utilise the discount code available in the member content area for free attendance of this session.
Participants will be issued with the following documents with their ticket purchase, which they should have on hand during the session:
0_Code of Conduct BINGO_CARD
1_NSW Architects Code of Professional Conduct
The Session
“Code of Conduct Bingo” is an interactive workshop designed to engage architects with the NSW Architects Code of Professional Conduct and refresh everyone’s memory of the various provisions of the Code. It addresses Performance Criteria 1 from the 2021 National Standard of Competency for Architects and is equivalent to 1.5 hours of Formal CPD.
In traditional Bingo, numbers are randomly drawn and announced, and players compete to match these on a ticket. The first player to get a line of 5 numbers on the ticket and call out “Bingo” is the winner.
In “Code of Conduct Bingo”, instead of randomly drawing and announcing numbers, players will be taken through a scenario that is similar to an executive summary in the determination of a complaint against an architect by the NSW Architects Registration Board. Competing in groups of 2-4 architects, players will identify issues in the scenario that they think could lead to possible breaches of the Code and match these to the relevant clauses of the Code on their ticket. The first team to get a line of 5 possible breaches of the Code and call out “Bingo” is the winner.
Dr Kirsten Orr
Dr Kirsten Orr is the Registrar and CEO of the NSW Architects Registration Board, the Government regulator for approx. 6,200 NSW architects. Her role drives the governance and performance of functions under the Architects Act 2003. This includes enforcing architects’ regulatory obligations, operating complaints investigation and dispute resolution systems, and developing and implementing initiatives to improve and strengthen regulatory effectiveness, including the delivery of education programs to enhance architects’ understanding of professional standards.