Newsletter

Professionalism Counts, September 2023

Judgment, Integrity, and Your CE

As the days draw short, it’s a good time to check your progress toward meeting your continuing education (CE) requirements before the end of the year.

Under the Qualification Standards for Actuaries Issuing Statements of Actuarial Opinion in the United States-more colloquially known as the U.S. Qualification Standards, or USQS-you must earn at least 30 hours of relevant CE each year, including 6 organized hours, 3 professionalism hours, and 1 bias hour. If you plan to issue a statement of actuarial opinion for NAIC Annual Statements, 15 of the 30 hours must be directly relevant to topics in section 3.1.1, and 6 of the 15 hours must be organized. These terms-“relevant, ” “bias, ” “professionalism, ” and “organized”-are defined in the USQS. Let’s take a look.

  • Relevant: Under the USQS, CE is “relevant” if it 1.) broadens or deepens your understanding of one or more aspects of your work; 2.) exposes you to new and evolving techniques for addressing actuarial issues; 3.) expands your knowledge of practice in related disciplines that bear directly on your work; or 4.) facilitates your entry into a new area of actuarial practice.
  • Bias content provides knowledge and perspective that helps you identify and assess biases that may exist in data, assumptions, algorithms, and models that impact actuarial services. Biases may include but are not limited to statistical, cognitive, and social biases.
  • Professionalism content helps you understand and apply the Code of Professional Conduct, actuarial standards of practice (ASOPs), and related actuarial professionalism guidance. Examples of professionalism CE include studying, reviewing, or providing input on an exposure draft of an ASOP; studying or reviewing the Code of Professional Conduct; attending an actuarial professionalism webinar; and serving on the Actuarial Standards Board or a professionalism committee.
  • Organized activities” give you the opportunity to interact with actuaries or professionals working for different organizations. Conferences, seminars, webcasts, in-person or online courses, and committee work are a few examples of organized activity.

In our self-regulated profession, a great deal depends on each actuary’s judgment and integrity. Every day you use your professional judgment, grounded in integrity, to make decisions about your work. The same judgment and integrity should apply to choosing your CE. For example, a session that may be helpful and relevant to one actuary may be completely irrelevant to

another actuary. Ultimately, it is your responsibility to make a reasonable, good-faith determination of what CE opportunities are relevant to your practice and thus fulfill the requirements of the USQS. If you have questions, we encourage you to refer to the USQS, the FAQs on the U.S. Qualification Standards, and “Which CE Requirements Apply to Me?” If, after reviewing those resources, you still have questions, you may submit a question to the Committee on Qualifications.

[Hed] USQS Bias Requirement

As this is only the second year that the bias requirement has been in effect, the Academy has received questions about what might qualify for bias CE. Below is a list of Academy resources that may qualify for bias CE.

TitleFormatPractice AreaDate
Where Does Bias Hide? Defining Data Biases and Unfairly Discriminatory Considerations Webinar All 10/26/23WebinarAll10/26/23
Discrimination: Considerations for Machine Learning, AI Models, and Underlying Data Issue Brief All 8/23Issue BriefAll8/23
Health Equity and Benefit Design-Part 1: Overview Issue Brief Health 8/23Issue BriefHealth8/23
An Actuarial View of Data Bias: Definitions, Impacts, and Considerations Issue Brief All 7/23Issue BriefAll7/23
Approaches to Identify and/or Mitigate Bias in Property and Casualty Insurance Issue Brief P/C 2/23Issue BriefP/C2/23
Big Data and Algorithms in Actuarial Modeling and Consumer Impacts Issue Brief All 10/22Issue BriefAll10/22
Correlation Versus Causation: Clarifying the Differences & Implications Webinar All 7/22WebinarAll7/22
An Actuarial View of Correlation and Causation-From Interpretation to Practice to Implications Issue Paper All 7/22Issue BriefAll7/22
Sourcing Protected Class Information in P&C Insurance Issue Brief P/C 6/22Issue BriefP/C6/22
What Is Unfair Discrimination in Insurance? Webinar All 5/22WebinarAll5/22
Big Data and Algorithms in Actuarial Modeling and Consumer Impacts: Six Questions and Answers for Actuaries Webinar All 3/22WebinarAll3/22
Big Data and Algorithms in Actuarial Modeling and Consumer Impacts Issue Paper All 11/21Issue BriefAll11/21