Conduct Competency Assessment
Conduct Competency Assessment
Conduct Competency Assessment
ASSESSMENT (CCA)
Presenter
PRESENTER
PRESENPRESENTER
ROLIE S. ARELLANO PRESENTER
TER Instructor III
ROLIE S. ARELLANO
Instructor III
ROLIE S. ARELLANO
Instructor III
CONDUCTING COMPETENCY
ASSESSMENT
Availability of
Availability of
Assessment
Candidate
Center
CACStaff/Processing Officer
Provides information on Qualifications for
assessment
Provides information on assessment
and certification arrangements
Administers the self-assessment guide for
qualification applied for to the applicant-
candidate
CAC PROVIDES CHECKLIST OF
REQUIREMENTS TO APPLICANTS
AC Processing Officer
Provides applicant-candidate the following:
Application form
Registry of
Workers Assessed and Certified (RWAC)
CARS
Rating Sheets
2. Authentic
Authenticity relates to ensuring that each piece of
evidence is from the candidate and not another
person - that the assessor is confident that it is the
candidates own work.
3. Current
Currency relates to the age of the evidence
presented by a candidate to demonstrate that they
are still competent.
4. Sufficient
Sufficiency relates to the quality and quantity of
evidence assessed.
5. Consistent
Show that the candidate consistently meets the
standards under workplace conditions rather than
showing a one - off demonstration of the
standards?
6. Recent
Recency relates to the age of evidence in
relationship to current version of the relevant unit of
competency.
EVIDENCE GATHERING TOOLS
Observation checklist
An observation checklist enables the assessor to
observe in a focused way, to take structured notes
that can be referred to when making the assessment
decision, to provide informed feedback to candidates,
and to enhance the objectivity of the assessment
decision.
Questioning
Asking questions is a widely used teaching, learning
and assessment technique.
Third party Report
Third party evidence is evidence gathered from
workplace supervisors, peers and others to support
an assessment decision.
Portfolio
A portfolio is a collection of materials prepared by a
candidate to demonstrate their knowledge, skills
and understanding. It has often been used as a tool
for candidates seeking RPL.
MAKE THE ASSESSMENT DECISION
Evaluation of Evidences
Once the evidence has been collected, it
should be compared with the relevant unit(s)
of competency to make the assessment
decision. If the assessment process has been
valid, reliable, fair, and flexible and the
evidence meets the rules of evidence, then
the decision making should be
straightforward.
Dimensions of competency
In evaluating the evidence, the assessor should
examine each of he dimensions of competency to
ensure all aspects are demonstrated within the
evidence. This involves asking four key questions.
1. Did the candidate demonstrate the appropriate
task skills?
2. Did the candidate demonstrate the appropriate
task management skills?
3. Did the candidate demonstrate the appropriate
contingency management skills?
4. Did the candidate demonstrate the appropriate
job/role environment skills?
Rules of evidence
The final check is that the evidence meets the rules of
evidence. Assessors need to ensure that the evidence:
reflects the skills and knowledge described in the relevant
unit(s) of competency
shows application of the skills in the context described in the
range statement
indicates that skills and knowledge are applied in real
workplace situations
demonstrates competence over a period of time
is corroborated
is able to be verified
Training Client
Work Sample
Record References
Procedure:
Prepare candidate
Gather evidence