ISO/IEC, AS (Australia), BS/BS EN (UK/Europe), EN (CEN/CENELEC) and ASTM
The Shared Foundation All five systems ISO/IEC, AS (Australia), BS/BS EN (UK/Europe), EN (CEN/CENELEC), and ASTM share the same fundamental logic for test method documents. The core sequence of what you’re testing → what you need → how to prepare → what to do → how to calculate → what to report is universal. This is because test method writing is ultimately governed by scientific reproducibility, and any valid test method must answer those same questions regardless of which body publishes it. However, the framing, additional sections, terminology, and governance differ significantly between bodies.
ISO / IEC The International Reference Standard
ISO and IEC are governed by the ISO/IEC Directives Part 2, which set the international benchmark that most other national bodies align with. The prescribed test method clause order is:
(a) principle; (b) reagents and materials; (c) apparatus; (d) preparation and preservation of test samples and test pieces; (e) procedure; (f) expression of results, including method of calculation and precision of the test method, and in ISO, the measurement uncertainty; (g) test report. Two notable ISO specific features:
A document specifying test methods shall not imply any obligation to carry out any kind of test. It shall merely state the method by which the assessment, if required, is to be conducted.
Measurement uncertainty is required in ISO test methods specifically quantifying the range within which the true result is expected to lie.
If more than one adequate test method exists for a characteristic, only one should in principle be specified. If more than one must be included, a referee test method may be identified to resolve doubts or disputes.
EN (CEN/CENELEC) European Standards
EN standards are produced by CEN (construction, mechanical, general) and CENELEC (electrical). They use the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations which are themselves aligned with the ISO/IEC Directives. The structure of EN test methods is therefore essentially identical to ISO the same clause sequence of Principle → Apparatus → Procedure → Expression of Results → Test Report applies. The critical feature of ENs is the “Unique Acceptance” obligation: when an EN is published, all member states (including the UK pre-Brexit, all EU members) must adopt it identically and withdraw any conflicting national standard. This is what creates the “BS EN”, “DIN EN”, “NF EN” designations the same document with a national foreword prepended.
BS and BS EN British Standards / European Adoptions
BSI’s drafting rules are published in BS 0 (the “standard for standards”) and their Rules for the Structure and Drafting of UK Standards. A fixed structure consisting of “Scope”, “Normative references” and “Terms and definitions” clauses is required in all documents for consistency, even if the “Normative references” and “Terms and definitions” clauses are empty. The overall document structure mirrors ISO/IEC closely:
The major subdivisions are Title (mandatory), Foreword (mandatory), Introduction (optional/conditional), Scope (mandatory), Normative references (mandatory), Terms and definitions (mandatory), Symbols and abbreviated terms (conditional), Technical content including test methods (mandatory/conditional), Annexes (optional), Bibliography (conditional), and Index (optional).
The key distinction is the BS EN designation itself. BS ENs are British Standard implementations of English language versions of European Standards (ENs). BSI has an obligation to publish all ENs and to withdraw any conflicting British Standards after a period of coexistence of up to 21 months. This means BS EN test methods are structurally identical to their EN parent BSI cannot modify the technical content, only add a national foreword. Rules for the drafting of the different types of British Standards are given in Annex J of the BSI drafting rules. In a specification or test method, an annex is normative if it contains requirements or test methods.
A BSI-specific addition is explicit guidance on health and safety warnings: a standard wording warning shall always be included where the standard calls for the use of substances and/or procedures that can be injurious to health if adequate precautions are not taken, noting that it refers only to technical suitability and does not absolve the user from legal obligations.
ASTM The Most Distinctive Architecture
ASTM’s test method structure is governed by their “Blue Book” the Form and Style for ASTM Standards and is the most different from ISO. An ASTM test method typically includes a concise description of an orderly procedure for determining a property or constituent of a material, an assembly of materials, or a product. The directions for performing the test should include all of the essential details as to apparatus, test specimen, procedure, and calculations needed to achieve satisfactory precision and bias. The prescribed ASTM sequence is:
Title (mandatory), Designation (mandatory), Introduction, Scope (mandatory), Referenced Documents, Terminology, Summary of Test Method, Significance and Use (mandatory), Interferences, Apparatus, Reagents and Materials, Hazards (mandatory when applicable), Sampling/Test Specimens/Test Units, Preparation of Apparatus, Calibration and Standardization, Conditioning, Procedure (mandatory), Calculation or Interpretation of Results, Report, Precision and Bias (mandatory), Measurement Uncertainty, Keywords (mandatory), Annexes and Appendixes, References, Summary of Changes.
The sections in bold are either mandatory in ASTM or have no ISO equivalent:
Summary of Test Method a brief plain English description of what the test does, sitting near the front. ISO has no equivalent; the principal clause is more technical.
Significance and Use mandatory in ASTM, unique to ASTM. This clause explains why the test matters what the results are used for, what decisions they inform, and the limitations of the method. ISO and AS have no equivalent section.
Interferences a dedicated clause for factors that can interfere with or invalidate the result (e.g. contamination, temperature effects, background radiation). ISO may address this in Notes within the Procedure, but ASTM makes it a standalone section.
Hazards mandatory when applicable. ASTM requires a dedicated Hazards section whenever the test involves dangerous materials or equipment. ISO addresses safety warnings inline; ASTM pulls them into their own section.
Precision and Bias ASTM’s most rigorous and distinctive requirement. Every test method shall contain a statement regarding the precision of test results obtained in the same laboratory under specifically defined conditions of within laboratory variability (repeatability conditions), and regarding the precision of test results obtained in different laboratories (reproducibility conditions). The precision and bias section of the test method shall include a brief descriptive summary of the interlaboratory study that will permit the user of the test method to judge the reliability of the data. This summary should include the number of laboratories, number of property levels tested, range of the measured average property levels, and number of replicate tests. ISO has “precision” within the Expression of Results clause and requires “measurement uncertainty” separately. ASTM combines precision and bias into a dedicated mandatory standalone section, with specific statistical requirements backed by a formal interlaboratory study (ILS).
Comparative Summary Table
| Feature | ISO/IEC | AS (Australia) | BS / BS EN | EN (CEN) | ASTM |
| Governing document | ISO/IEC Directives Part 2 | SG-006 | BS 0 / BSI Drafting Rules | CEN/CENELEC Internal Regs | Blue Book (Form & Style) |
| Principle clause | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | Partial — within Scope/Summary |
| Scope | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory |
| Normative References | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Referenced Documents |
| Terms & Definitions | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | Terminology (conditional) |
| Summary of Test Method | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes (unique to ASTM) |
| Significance & Use | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Mandatory (unique to ASTM) |
| Apparatus | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Sample Preparation | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Interferences | Inline in Notes | Inline in Notes | Inline in Notes | Inline in Notes | ✅ Dedicated section |
| Hazards | Inline warnings | Inline warnings | Standalone warning box | Inline warnings | ✅ Mandatory standalone section |
| Procedure | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory | ✅ Mandatory |
| Expression of Results | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | Calculation clause |
| Measurement Uncertainty | ✅ Required (ISO) | Referenced | Referenced | Referenced | Optional/separate |
| Precision & Bias | Within results clause | Within results clause | Within results clause | Within results clause | ✅ Mandatory standalone + ILS data |
| Test Report | ✅ Mandatory clause | ✅ Mandatory clause | ✅ Mandatory clause | ✅ Mandatory clause | Report clause |
| Keywords | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Mandatory |
| Summary of Changes | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Verbal forms | shall/should/may/can | shall/should/may/can | shall/should/may/can | shall/should/may/can | shall/should/may/will |
| Numbering | Decimal (1, 1.1, 1.1.1) | Decimal | Decimal | Decimal | Decimal (modified) |
The Key Takeaway
The ISO/IEC Directives are effectively the common ancestor AS, BS, and EN test methods all follow the same clause sequence because their governing bodies have aligned with ISO. ASTM is the most independent system, with its longer section list, mandatory Significance & Use clause, dedicated Hazards section, and its rigorous standalone Precision & Bias requirement backed by interlaboratory study data features that make ASTM test methods particularly explicit about why a test is run and how reliable its results are.