What is the Path to Certified Scrum Professional?
The Path to CSP provides a best-in-class professional development program across the full breadth of roles in a Scrum or typical Agile team through role-specific tracks for Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches, Product Owners and Developers as per the following diagram.
What does the Path to Certified Scrum Professional Involve?
The Path to CSP for Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches involves three incremental steps. Achievement of each designation is a prerequisite for the next as follows.
- Certified ScrumMaster® (CSM)
- Advanced Certified ScrumMaster® (A-CSM)
- Certified Scrum Professional-ScrumMaster® (CSP-SM)
Why Take the Path to CSP for Scrum Masters?
CSM is Insufficient
Professional Denotes Competence
Demonstrate Work Experience
Distinguish Yourself
Advance your Career
Tech Scrum Foundations Courses
Lead by Example
Learn from Real World Experience
Our A-CSM course includes numerous exercises in which learners describe how they have implemented techniques in their work as well as exercises in which learners watch multiple others practice a skill in relation to a real work situation. An example of this is a “coaching dojo” in which learners witness others tackle real work problems in a coaching stance using a structured conversation model. Learning is achieved both by doing and studying how others do.
The assignment portion of our CSP-SM programme involves five rounds of presenting to other learners how an objective was achieved on-the-job at work. Since the objective is the same for all learners, seeing how 3-4 others chose to approach it given their unique contexts, allows learners to benchmark themselves and draw ideas and inspiration from the practical implementations from other learners.
Why is this Relevant for Agile Coaches?
Agile Coaches tell us that it is Relevant
Similar Roles Require Similar Skills
Appropriately Broad
Not just about Scrum
Expand & Level up to the Big Challenges
The Path to CSP learning objectives are designed and maintained by an world-class expert panel of Agile trainers and coaches to both:
- expand the scope of the learner’s thinking tools and skills, as well as to
- incrementally level up cognitive skills and ability to apply knowledge to context.
Expand your Toolkit
Unlike a CSM, the starting assumption for the A-CSM and CSP-SM programmes is that the candidate understands core Scrum concepts. Given this, full focus is given to the thinking tools and skills necessary to operate as Scrum Master or Agile Coach. Since Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches serve Product Owners, Developers and others, topics related to such roles are approached from the perspective of how the Scrum Master or Agile Coach enables performance in others through teaching, facilitation, coaching etc.
A skilled Scrum Master does far more than just facilitation and a skilled Agile Coach does far more than just professional coaching.
Scrum WithStyle’s A-CSM explores no less than nine stances to operate out of as a Scrum Master or Agile Coach. Each stance involves mastery of a different set of skills in order to achieve fluency.
Expand your Toolkit
The Path to CSP Learning Objectives are designed to progress the learner incrementally through the levels of the widely used ordering of cognitive skills in learning environments known as Bloom’s Taxonomy. The levelling up progression can be summarised as follows.
- CSM is primarily focused on Knowledge and Comprehension level learning objectives.
- A-CSM explores similar and additional topics at the level of Comprehension and Application.
- CSP-SM explore similar and additional topics with many learning objectives at Analysis, Synthesis and Evaluation levels.
Why not Stop as an Advanced Certified ScrumMaster?
Put another way, Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches who cannot effect change to the organisation beyond the Scrum Teams that they work with are limited to local optimisation. In our experience, this results in wasting time and effort each and every month working around organisational constraints that are misaligned with improvement goals and should be eliminated as constraints.
Succeeding in partnering with (senior) managers to do this is highly unlikely without skill and confidence in areas such as Lean Thinking, Systems Thinking, agility-related organisational design as well as structured organisational impediment analysis and resolution design. All of these topics are explored in our CSP-SM programme.