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RPL Pre Assessment Workshop

Competence

Attendance of RPL evidence facilitation sessions, however, is not sufficient evidence of your competence for us to award you a certificate and the credits attached to this programme. You are required to undergo assessment to prove your competence to achieve credits leading to a national qualification.

Being Declared Competent Entails

Competence is the ability to perform whole work roles, to the standards expected in employment, in a real working environment. There are three levels of competence:

To receive a certificate of competence and be awarded credits, you are required to provide evidence of your competence by compiling a portfolio of evidence, which will be assessed by a PSETA RPL assessor.

You Have to Submit a Portfolio of Evidence

A portfolio of evidence is a structured collection of evidence that reflects your efforts, progress and achievement in a specific learning area, and demonstrates your competence.

The Assessment of Your Competence

Assessment of competence is a process of making judgments about an individual’s competence through matching evidence collected to the appropriate national standards. The evidence in your portfolio should closely reflect the outcomes and assessment criteria of the unit standards of the learning programme for which you are being assessed.

Should it happen that a candidate is deemed not yet competent upon submission of evidence for RPL, that candidate will be allowed to be re-assessed. The candidate can, however, only be allowed two reassessments.

When learners must undergo re-assessment, the following conditions will apply:

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Key Principles of RPL

“Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) means the comparison of previous learning and experience of a learner however obtained, against the outcomes of the unit standard or qualification.”

The purpose of RPL is to identify, assess, recognise, and improve a candidate’s status in terms of what he/she knows and can do against national standards and qualifications. This learning could include various means and settings, such as formal education and training programmes, on the job training, self-study etc.

Reasons for Implementing RPL

To recognise prior learning in the context of:

“Learning” for purposes of recognition thereof can take place through formal, informal and non-formal means and in formal, informal and non-formal settings.

It includes various disciplines of learning, but is not limited to:

The outcomes of Recognition of Prior Learning include, but are not limited to:

Appeals & Disputes

The candidate has the right to appeal against assessment decision or practice they regard as unfair. An Appeals and Disputes procedure is in place and communicated to all assessment candidates for them to appeal based on:

Appeals must be lodged in writing (Candidate Appeal Form) & submitted to the Training Provider internal moderator within 48 hours, following the assessment in question. The moderator will consider the decide regarding the granting of a re-assessment. The learner will be informed about the appeal-outcome within 3 days of lodging the appeal. Should the learner not be satisfied with the internal appeal outcome, the learner will be advised of the rights to refer the matter to the SETA ETQA.

Portfolio Building

Your Portfolio of Evidence (PoE) contains the evidence needed to declare you competent and to award credits towards the award of this qualification to you. Evidence should be authentic and reflect both your knowledge of the subject and your ability to apply this knowledge in the workplace. Thus, evidence of day-to-day activities supporting the specific outcomes addressed by this learning programme should complement the theoretical learning you attended and were assessed on. There are FIVE key steps in creating a portfolio that will reflect your competence.

Plan your Portfolio

Plan and document the sequence, graphics and layout of your portfolio. This will assist you in following a logical sequence, which makes the Portfolio also much more user friendly and understandable for the assessor. It will also reflect your professional approach and attitude towards the subject matter, your work and your life. Impact and appearance always contribute to or affect your chances of being taken seriously and declared competent!

Direct Evidence

Gather the Evidence

Direct evidence is actual evidence produced by the learner. This is the most valid type of evidence. Direct evidence also easily establishes authenticity. This should be the RPL assessors’ primary source of evidence.

Evidence of direct evidence include but not limited to:

Direct evidence will need to be verified by the candidate’s supervisor as their own work.

Historical Background

This type of evidence tells the assessor what the candidate could do in the past. It needs to be checked for authenticity.

Examples include but not limited to:

These three sources of evidence are complimentary sources of information about a candidate’s competence- they are best used concurrently. Using a good mix of all three sources of evidence gives better reflection of balanced competency of candidate.

Cross-Reference Your Evidence To The Unit Standards

Evidence for assessment against unit standards must be linked to the outcomes of the unit standard in question. An evidence locator grid is useful for this.

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