ICS Learn - CIPD Submission Guidelines v3.1 March 2020
ICS Learn - CIPD Submission Guidelines v3.1 March 2020
ICS Learn - CIPD Submission Guidelines v3.1 March 2020
Student Edition - v1
Student Version - v1
Page 1 ICS Learn | CIPD Submission Guidelines
Contents
Purpose of Guidelines......................................................... P3
1. ICS Learn Cover Sheet..................................................... P4
2. Format of Assignments.................................................. P5
2.1 Report Format.................................................................................... P5
3. Word Count...................................................................... P6
3.1 Word Count Allocations.................................................................... P6
The purpose of this document is to provide you with clear guidance on submitting
ICS Learn CIPD assignments. It covers areas such as word count limit, referencing,
use of appendices and tables.
These guidelines also explore some recurring errors during the submission
process, which may result in work being returned unmarked.
If you feel that any part of these guidelines is unclear, or if you think there are
other areas we could usefully cover in this document, we would be happy to
receive your feedback.
Please always download the cover sheet that appears with the assignment brief, as some
assignments require different information.
Your cover sheet needs to be fully completed and must form the first page of your assignment.
It should not be submitted as a separate document. We cannot accept an assignment for
marking which is either missing the cover sheet, has the wrong cover sheet, has information
missing, or has the cover sheet attached as a separate document. This is because the cover
sheet serves two main purposes:
1. It is your declaration that the work is yours and therefore needs to be part of the work itself.
2. It provides all the essential detail about your submission and provides a record or paper trail of
all of your submissions for that piece of work.
Unit Code
The code will always be the number and three letters after the “OL”. So, in this example
the unit code is 3RTO.
You will find this at the top of the assignment brief (e.g. 40552/01). For formative
Assessment Number assessments, this will simply be ‘Formative 1’, ‘Formative 2’, and so on, based on the
order in which they appear in your materials.
Please put the date you attended the online classroom. If you have genuinely been
Online Class Date unable to attend a live classroom and have listened to the recording instead, please
enter the date the recording was made.
Tutor Name Please enter the name of the tutor who was running the online classroom.
Please take a moment to check this has been accurately completed before submitting
First Submission Date your assignment to your tutor, particularly if you have worked on it then put it away for
a few days before submitting it.
Resubmission Date If you are asked to resubmit a 2nd time, your resubmission date must be entered here.
Please ensure that you have included ALL the above information on your cover sheet. Always ask your tutor if
Page 4 ICS Learn | CIPD Submission Guidelines
you are unclear on what to include.
2. Format of Assignments
2.1 Report Format
If the assignment brief asks you to write a report or present your answer in a report-format,
then you should follow that advice. If an assignment is not presented as a report, then we
will return the assessment to yourself, and ask that you submit again in a report format.
Your report is normally structured as follows:
• A Contents page
• An abstract or executive summary
• An introduction*
• Main body of the report broken down via headings and subheadings
• A conclusion*
• A Reference/Bibliography List*
You can refer to the Cheat Sheet called Report Writing: The Basics or for a more comprehensive
guide you can read the document called “ICS Learn Effective Report Writing” both which are
found in the Resources section of your course site.
2.2 Assignments Not in Report 2.3 What Does A Good Report Look Like?
Format
If you read an assessment brief and Although we have given you the format of how
it doesn’t state that you need to to construct your assignment, it is important to
produce a report, you should still focus on the presentation of your assignment.
look to structure it professionally Below we have provided some handy guidance
with a contents page, headings and around what a good report will look like.
subheadings and include reference/ • Use Font Size 11 or 12 (never 10 or below)
bibliography pages if required. • Use 1.15 line spacing
• Use a sensible business font style (i.e. nothing that
Please note that, as well as looking looks like handwriting)
professional and being far easier to • Write the main parts of assignments in ‘normal’ font
read, breaking down your work into (i.e. not bold or italics)
headings and sub-headings massively • Always leave white space between sections (i.e.
helps you as you can easily identify if paragraphs)
there are areas of the question and/ • Always presented in portrait format unless the live
or assessment criteria that you may class advises that part of it needs to be landscape
have inadvertently missed out. • Try to write in full, flowing sentences.
• Look to introduce what you are going to be talking
It also clearly signposts to the tutor about instead of diving straight into your answer.
(and any other readers) which part of Set the scene and some context where possible
your work relates to the assessment (i.e. could you identify the subject area and provide
tasks and criteria. a definition)
Page 5 ICS Learn | CIPD Submission Guidelines
3. Word Count
3.1 Word Count Allocations
All the summative assignments that you complete as part of your CIPD qualification carry
a strict word count. This can range from 500 words to 3,900 words. The word count is the
number of words that CIPD believe you need to write to competently answer the question(s)
in the assignment.
+/- 10% Rule
The CIPD recognise that delivering your assignment at exactly that word count is challenging
and there is therefore, a leeway available of plus or minus 10% of that word count.
By way of illustration, here are some examples of typical assignment lengths, showing the
impact of this leeway:
So, for example, if you had an assignment of 3,000 words, you could write anywhere between
2,700 words and 3,300 words and this would be acceptable. It is worth noting that some
assignments only carry a word count for part of the work e.g. Task 1 may have a word count of
500 but Task 2 does not carry a word count.
Tutors will adopt a common sense approach to reviewing your work, but they do hold the right
to send the assessment back to you unmarked if you do go over the allotted 10% +/- leeway. If
this is the case, the assessment will be sent back to you and we will ask you to either increase
or decrease the word count.
Formative assessments
For formative assessments we are not as strict on word count and the +/- 10% rule
doesn’t not apply for these types of assessments. Some do not carry a word count at all,
although you should give a reasonable level of detail in your answers. It is, however, good
practice to get into working within the word count as it is strictly imposed when it comes
to the summative assignments.
It is very important to understand the guidelines around what is and is not included in word
count, especially as this can make a massive difference as to whether your assignment is within
word count or not and therefore whether it can be accepted for marking or not.
Here is a quick summary of what is and is not included in word count, but please read on for
more detail around some of these points:
Please note that you always need to explain any charts/diagrams/graphs inserted into
your assignment. Your explanation would be included in word count.
For example, the following PESTLE analysis would NOT be included in word count providing
there is a more detailed explanation in the word-counted narrative. This is because all the bullet
points are 6 words or fewer:
However, you might decide that you are going to present your full, detailed PESTLE analysis as
a table (instead of having a snapshot and a separate narrative), because you believe that this is
a clear and logical way of presenting the information. You can do this, but this will be counted
in the word count due to the table being the answer and not just a short snapshot.
The simple rule is: If the information in the table IS your answer, it must be word-counted.
Please note, however, that tables should not be over-used in any assignment.
Assignments should be written in a way that flows and, although there may
be occasions where information is effectively presented on a table, please do
not use a table for several parts of an assignment as the flow of your work
will disappear. You should not use tables as a way of avoiding the word count.
Some students copy and paste the actual questions into their assignment, so they can keep
referring to it as well as signposting the reader to the relevant task. You do not need to do
this but, if you do, this will not be included in word count.
An appendix cannot be used as a way of including extra information whilst avoiding word count.
You need to ensure you have answered the question in the body of your assignment. Therefore,
please think carefully as to whether you really need to include any appendices or whether you
need to re-visit the wording in your assignment to ensure it covers the points you would have
raised in your appendices.
The use of non-academic websites (e.g. Wikipedia, Business Balls, Mind Tools) will always be
discouraged, as they aren’t seen as a reliable source of information.
You are expected to reference and to clearly cite your sources. All students across all levels
are expected to use Harvard Referencing, which is the referencing standard that CIPD
recognise.
The references page at the back of your assignment should be presented on a fresh page
and headed up ‘References’. This is not word-counted.
A bibliography is everything you have used for your research, but which you have not referenced
in your assignment.
As a minimum, we would expect the relevant module in the ICS Learn Course Materials and your
eTextbook to appear on all bibliographies, as they will have formed the starting point for your
wider research, although you may have directly referenced from your eTextbook.
For example:
Marchington and Kynighou (2012: 3336) state, “Given that the global financial crisis (GFC) has impacted
on patterns of human resource management, it is likely that this has also shaped employee involvement
and Participation (EIP).”
In this case, the words in red - Marchington and Kynighou (2012: 3336) - would NOT be included in word
count. The rest of the words ARE included in word count.
Backslash
One thing to be mindful of when it comes to the word count, is the use of the backslash. In
assignments, you may decide to use a backslash between words e.g. policies/procedures/
paperwork.
When you check you word count, your computer will see the above as one word because there
are no spaces between it. In fact, it is three separate words and will be counted as such. To avoid
this moving forward we suggest you do one of the following:
a) decide which word is best and only use one word instead of two or three joined by a backslash
b) put a space one side of the slash so that their computer does recognise the separate words.
You will be notified via the student community if a tutor is due to be on annual leave and
we kindly ask that you do not submit assignments during this time.
5. Submission Guidelines
All assignments – formative and summative – should be submitted in order and you need to
pass one before submitting the next. This is because:
• Assignments often have learnings which you need to incorporate into subsequent assignments (e.g.
around word count, presentation, use of references etc.) and this cannot be actioned if the student
submits several assignments at the same time
• If a student submits several at the same time and gets NYP for them all, that is a pretty de-motivational
message and a lot of re-work at the same time. We do not want to put you in this position
• Tutors expect to have a steady flow of assignment submissions. Large quantities from one or more
students will result in a spike which may mean they are unable to mark all assignments within the SLA,
resulting in delays in marking
If you submit two or more assignments at the same time, you may find
they are returned unmarked and you are asked to submit one at a time.
For criteria rated as a NYP, tutors will give guidance as to what you need to do in order to pass
on your next submission.
For some criteria that you have passed, you may still receive development points. These are
pointers to take on board for future assignments so please do learn from them and act on them
in future submissions.