Brighton-based Company NCsoft Europe Supports First Computer Games Apprenticeship
Posted by: Aaron Lockard on April 12, 2007 8:46:10 AM
NCsoft offers a qualification in Quality Assurance And Games Production
Top games publisher NCsoft is working alongside the City College
Brighton, PartnerTrans and Skillset to pilot the very first
Apprenticeship in Quality Assurance and Games Production. The
Apprenticeship focuses on games testing (which involves finding flaws
and bugs in computer games) and also improving the general gaming
experience for the player.This apprenticeship was developed as a
response to a desire, expressed by the games industry, to develop more
practical skills for the industry. Skillset helped to identify this gap
in its Sector Skills Agreement for the industry. This move indicates a
good stepping-stone for the industry and academic partners in the
benefits of working in partnership and increases opportunities for
minority groups.
Chris Chilton, Computer Games & Animation
Manager at Skillset, said: "Skillset's Apprenticeship in QA and Games
Production is a key part of the Computer Games Industry's skills
strategy. It offers a structured entry point outside of the games
industry's traditional academic routes. The apprenticeship is led and
delivered by the games industry, with the trainee spending the majority
of the time with a company being mentored by an experienced
practitioner. NCsoft support has been vital in Skillset's development
and piloting of the scheme and in offering trainees the opportunity to
work in this exciting sector whilst earning a recognised qualification."
Four
trainees were enrolled onto the scheme, which has seen three of them
enter into the QA team at NCsoft in Brighton for a year long work
placement supplemented by regular college training at the City College
Brighton. The City and Guilds are awarding the Apprenticeships, the
UK's leading awarding body for work-related qualifications. The
Apprenticeship will ultimately lead to a level 2 qualification.
Moreover, trainees will gain an essential mix of practical and
theoretical games knowledge.
Sam Watts, QA Manager at NCsoft
Europe makers of games such as Lineage, City of Heroes and Guild Wars
is acting as a mentor on the apprenticeship programme and consultant to
City College Brighton. He told us: "Being involved in the shaping of
the future Apprenticeship and mentoring the candidates allows me to
pass my experience on to potential future full-time employees; or just
be happy in the knowledge that they are able to gain employment
elsewhere with a sound understanding of the fast-paced games industry."
All
three trainees at NCsoft Europe are reported to be enjoying the
Apprenticeship and are doing very well. Adam Bilbrough, one of the four
apprentices, said of his experiences on the pilot: "I took this
Apprenticeship so that I can gain the skills and knowledge required for
the role in the QA aspect of the games industry, as well as get a
recognised qualification in this career." It is hoped that after the
Apprenticeship is assessed in 2007, other companies will follow
NCsoft's lead and set up similar schemes and, in turn, help form a more
systematic entry route into the games industry.