Certified Information System Auditor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Certified Information Systems Auditor (CISA) is an audit professional certification sponsored by the Information Systems Audit and Control Association (ISACA). Candidates for the certification must meet requirements set by ISACA.
Contents |
[edit] History
The CISA certification was established in 1978[1] for several reasons:
- Develop and maintain a tool that could be used to evaluate an individuals' competency in conducting information system audits.
- Provide a motivational tool for information systems auditors to maintain their skills, and monitor the success of the maintenance programs.
- Provide criteria to help aid management in the selection of personnel and development.
The first CISA examination was administered in 1981, and registration numbers have grown each year. Over 60,000[1] candidates have earned the CISA designation.
The CISA certification has been recognised with ANSI accreditation, along with the CISM certification- both of these certifications are managed by ISACA. It is one of the few certifications formally approved by the US Department of Defense in their Information Assurance Technical category (DoD 8570.01-M).
[edit] Requirements
Candidates for a CISA certification must pass the examination, agree to adhere to ISACA's Code of Professional Ethics, submit evidence of a minimum of five years of professional IS auditing, control, or security work, and abide by a program of continuing professional education.
Substitutions and waivers of such experience may be obtained as follows:[2]
- A maximum of one year of information systems experience OR one year of financial or operational auditing experience can be substituted for one year of information systems auditing, control, or security experience.
- 60 to 120 completed college semester credit hours (the equivalent of an Associate or Bachelor degree) can be substituted for one or two years, respectively, of information systems auditing, control or security experience.
- Two years as a full-time university instructor in a related field (e.g., computer science, accounting, information systems auditing) can be substituted for one year of information systems auditing, control or security experience.
[edit] Examination
The exam consists of 200 multiple-choice questions that must be answered within 4 hours. The exam is split between 6 Content Areas as of 2006:
- IS Audit Process - 10% of Exam
- IT Governance - 15% of Exam
- Systems and Infrastructure Lifecycle Management - 16% of Exam
- IT Service Delivery and Support - 14% of Exam
- Protection of Information Assets - 31% of Exam
- Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery - 14% of Exam
The exam is now offered in 11 languages at more than 200 locations worldwide in June and December.
June 2009 CISA Exam - Key Dates[3]:
11 Feb: Early Registration Deadline
8 Apr: Final Registration Deadline
13 June: Exam
[edit] References
- ^ a b http://www.isaca.org/Template.cfm?Section=CISA_Certification&Template=/TaggedPage/TaggedPageDisplay.cfm&TPLID=16&ContentID=43558 , CISA certification, Retrieved 28 July 2008
- ^ http://www.isaca.org/Template.cfm?Section=CISA_Certification&CONTENTID=20450&TEMPLATE=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm, CISA certification, Retrieved at 18 February 2008
- ^ CISA Exams
[edit] See also
- CISSP, Certified Information Systems Security Professional
- CISM, Certified Information Security Manager
- CGEIT, Certified in the Governance of Enterprise IT