iSQI: Building Quality Assurance and Testing Excellence
iSQI is a globally recognized certification body specializing in software quality assurance, testing, and IT service management. Their credentials validate expertise in practical testing methodologies and quality frameworks used across enterprise environments. iSQI certifications accelerate career progression for QA professionals and testing managers seeking internationally respected qualifications. Built on industry-standard body of knowledge, these certifications directly align with real-world testing practices.
- Vendor-neutral testing certifications recognized across Europe, Asia, and North America.
- ISTQB-aligned exam frameworks ensure compatibility with broader testing industry standards.
- Role-specific learning paths cover test automation, risk management, and quality leadership.
- Practical exam objectives focus on hands-on methodologies rather than theoretical concepts.
- Career advancement support with clear progression from foundation to expert certification levels.
- Cost-effective credentials that deliver measurable ROI through team upskilling and process improvement.
What Is the CPSA-FL Certification?
The CPSA-FL (Certified Professional for Software Architecture – Foundation Level) is an iSQI-recognized credential validating foundational software architecture knowledge. It covers design principles, architectural patterns, and decision-making frameworks essential for enterprise-level projects. This exam establishes credibility in your ability to architect scalable, maintainable systems.
Exam Structure: 100 Questions Overview
The CPSA-FL exam presents 100 multiple-choice questions testing your grasp of core architecture concepts. Based on exam objectives, questions assess your understanding of architectural patterns, quality attributes, and stakeholder communication. You'll have a defined timeframe to demonstrate mastery across all foundation-level domains.
Key Topics Covered in the Question Bank
Our 100 questions span architectural styles (microservices, monolithic, serverless), design patterns (MVC, layered, event-driven), and quality attribute trade-offs. You'll encounter scenario-based questions requiring practical judgment in system design contexts. Additional focus areas include documentation, architecture decisions, and cross-cutting concerns.