By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
EduTodayEduToday
  • Home
  • Education
    Education
    Show More
    Top News
    Celebrating the 12th anniversary of Career Calling
    August 22, 2021
    Interview with John Molenaar, Quality and Compliance Auditor
    December 14, 2021
    Strategic Review into First Aid units of competency in Western Australia
    April 25, 2022
    Latest News
    What kind of leader should you become?
    October 24, 2022
    What it takes to become a successful strategic learner
    October 24, 2022
    Instructional strategies: what are they?
    October 24, 2022
    Pandemic-related drop in enrolments and delays in student visa approvals causing chaos for RTOs
    August 12, 2022
  • VET Sector
    VET Sector
    Show More
    Top News
    A 19-member panel Industry VET Stakeholder Committee working to deal with the VET challenges
    October 1, 2019
    Online Media Solutions (OMS) Services
    September 3, 2021
    Reasonable adjustments in the learning environment
    February 20, 2022
    Latest News
    What are the plans for improving the vocational education and training sector – what are we missing?
    October 24, 2022
    A message from the CEO (October 2022)
    October 24, 2022
    Message from the CEO (12 August 2022)
    August 12, 2022
    In vocational education and training, what is assessment?
    August 12, 2022
  • HEP Sector
    HEP Sector
    Show More
    Top News
    Online learning is much more than access to training and assessment materials online
    August 22, 2021
    University jobs lost at a rate of ‘one in five’ as COVID-19 border laws continue to bite
    September 19, 2021
    Interview with Peter Doukas – Managing Director, Denison Toyer Education Lawyers
    November 1, 2021
    Latest News
    Contract cheating – One out of every ten students submits assignments written by someone else – and the vast majority of them get away with it.
    January 31, 2022
    Interview with Peter Doukas – Managing Director, Denison Toyer Education Lawyers
    November 1, 2021
    University jobs lost at a rate of ‘one in five’ as COVID-19 border laws continue to bite
    September 19, 2021
    Online learning is much more than access to training and assessment materials online
    August 22, 2021
  • School Sector
    School Sector
    Show More
    Top News
    ASQA has changed the rules for purchase and sale of RTO’s
    November 18, 2019
    Quality training and assessment resources from CAQA Resources
    September 19, 2021
    How to become a trainer and assessor in Australia.
    May 22, 2022
    Latest News
    Management of operational risks in training organisations
    October 24, 2022
    Strategies on how to promote your training organisation to international students
    October 24, 2022
    Creating a work environment that values employees
    October 24, 2022
    Continually reviewing, improving and self-assurance
    October 24, 2022
  • Australia
    Australia
    Show More
    Top News
    A potential audit of the Australian Skills Quality Authority by the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO)
    October 1, 2019
    ASQA’s strategic review of online learning
    September 19, 2021
    Is natural justice or procedural fairness possible with the current set up of ASQA?
    November 18, 2019
    Latest News
    During the IHEA Dual-Sector Network conference, Sukh Sandhu addressed issues and changes in the VET sector.
    August 12, 2022
    ASQA’s as a national training package assurance body
    July 17, 2022
    A database of cheating websites has been updated through intelligence sharing.
    July 17, 2022
    An ASQA initiative called Pathways and Perspectives has been launched
    July 17, 2022
  • Science & Tech
    Science & Tech
    Show More
    Top News
    Writing your Training and Assessment Strategy – Part 1 of Part 5
    December 1, 2020
    Why organisations should prioritise systematic continuous improvement as a strategic priority
    October 14, 2021
    Part 1- Contextualising of assessment resources 
    June 3, 2021
    Latest News
    The purpose of due-diligence audits
    August 12, 2022
    Set boundaries, establish guidelines, and work within them.
    June 27, 2022
    Message from the CEO
    October 14, 2021
    Why organisations should prioritise systematic continuous improvement as a strategic priority
    October 14, 2021
  • More
    • TV
    • Movies
Reading: CAQA FAQ Series – Validation and compliance requirements
Notification Show More
Latest News
Australian gov’t to review HE in long-term plan
News
Australia declined 50% of student visa applications from India in 2022
News
New Victoria University program gives high school leavers ‘space’ to figure out future
News
Fee-free TAFE and VET places for South Australians – Ai Group comment
News
CQU vocational education leader receives accolade
News
Aa
Aa
EduTodayEduToday
  • Business
  • Industry
  • Politics
  • Home
    • Home 1
    • Home 2
    • Home 3
    • Home 4
    • Home 5
  • Categories
    • Industry
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
CAQA Resources

CAQA FAQ Series – Validation and compliance requirements

Vijay
Last updated: 2021/10/04 at 6:37 PM
By Vijay 12 Min Read

What is the difference and commonality between Validation, Moderation and Pre-validation?
Pre-Validation (verification) is the practice of validation that occurs before using the assessment tools. This validation happens after either development of the assessment tool or purchase from a resource provider. The objective of pre-validation (verification) is to ensure that the materials meet the requirements of the training package.
Moderation is a quality control process that should be conducted before the assessment is finalised. Moderation is no longer a mandatory regulatory requirement in the current regulatory framework under the Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA).
Validation is a quality review process that confirms your RTO’s assessment system can consistently produce valid assessment judgements. It is conducted after the assessment tool is implemented and students’ assessments are completed and marked. It is a mandatory regulatory requirement in the SRTOs (the Standards for Registered Training Organisations).
The commonality is that all of them play an essential role to ensure the best industry practices related to assessment practice and judgment and continuous improvement.
If moderation is not mandatory, why do I need to conduct moderation before the assessment practice?
Though moderation is not mandatory, we strongly advise you to conduct moderation as it ensures best practice of effective assessment, mainly assessment practice and judgment. Moderation also takes your training and assessment strategy to the next level of excellence.
Do I need to validate a unit that I have already validated if it is superseded but is equivalent?
Yes, you must validate the unit. If a qualification is superseded or discontinued, this is a clear indication that industry needs have changed and the previous qualification is no longer the most suitable. Accordingly, it is a good practice to take that opportunity and check every part of the assessment whenever there is any change, even if it is equivalent.
The SRTO 2015 stipulates validation schedule is a five-year plan; each training product must be reviewed at least once in that five-year period, and only 50 per cent of the training products must be validated in the first three years of the schedule. Where does the five-year cycle start?
Before explaining the cycle, we would like to make one point very clear. The SRTO has put the minimum requirement, and as the name indicates, minimum means the least benchmark (not necessarily ideal for your requirements).
Your validation schedule is influenced by many factors, such as high volume of complaints against one of your trainers, high-risk training products, if there are too many non-competent results in the assessments, if students not understanding the instructions, or students dispute the outcome of their assessments. Any of these can be triggering points that should spark validation. The advice is to validate your training and assessment tools more often.
The five-year cycle starts from the day you are registered as an RTO or if you have been around for quite a time the cycle starts from 2015 (when the current RTO standards were implemented).
Why is validation important, and why are people talking about it extensively?
Validation has a valued place in the education system. It is one of the few compliance requirements that influence and is accountable for more than a dozen standards within the Standards for RTO 2015. As such, validation has become very important.
Validation needs to be clarified because there seems to be a lot of misunderstanding and inconsistency of interpretation and practice of validation. This, in turn, is resulting in malpractice, including awarding certification documentation to learners whom they have NOT assessed as meeting the training product’s requirements specified in the relevant training package. To avoid such major non-compliance RTOs need to have a clear understanding of validation and its practice.
What do I do if the validation team finding is that the assessment practice and judgment have significant issues and has not been done correctly?
In such circumstances, you need to follow the following steps.
Put another team to verify the finding. If the team affirms the outcome;
a) see if the students have been assessed in another unit or qualification and the learning outcome and tasks are covered there.
b) if not, conduct gap training and reassessment for the current students
c) if students have been awarded their certificate, recall all students who have been assessed as per the finding and conduct gap training and assessment
d) if students decline to participate, revoke the qualification as per the National Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011. Australian qualification must be awarded only to learners you have assessed to meet the training product’s requirements specified in the relevant training package.
If multiple qualifications share a unit, do I need to validate the unit in both qualifications?
Yes. Even though the unit’s code and name are the same, the context and industry requirements are different. For example, CHCDIV001 – Work with diverse people will have different contexts, tasks, assessment conditions and simulated environments in Child Care, Aged Care, Audiometry, Ambulance Communications (Dispatch), and Animal Care and Management.
I have a qualified compliance manager who understands the RTO standards like the palms of their hand; why do I need a validation team?
Forming your team with people who hold collective vocational competency, vocational teaching and learning, subject matter expertise with current skills, knowledge and experience is vital.
The advice is to include at least one subject matter expert with ‘industry relevance’ because, without their participation, your RTO can not ensure that the training and assessment practices are relevant to the needs of the industry. Industry experts can see areas that your compliance manager or trainers and assessors (even with industry currency) cannot see, such as:

  • regulations or laws governing the industry and standard operating procedures, equipment and machinery used at enterprise level
  • aspects of the work environment (for example, shifts or seasonal changes to schedules) that will affect delivery and assessment

Also, when validation is done by one person internally, there is a chance of non-compliance either through complacency, assumptions or familiarity.
Moreover, as the old adage proves, three heads are better than one.
What is the benefit of conducting pre-validation if I have to validate my assessment practice and judgment? Does the 50% rule apply to the pre-validation too?
Pre-validation (Verification) helps you to check your new assessment tool prior to their implementation, whether developed in-house or purchased; you need to ensure they are a valid tool that will ascertain that the assessment will be conducted according to the principles of assessment and rules of evidence. This will ensure that your future students can be accurately and consistently assessed and your assessment system meets the compliance obligations in clause 1.8 of the Standards.
No, the ‘50% in three years’ does not apply. You have to validate all assessment tools 100%; hence the 50% validation does not apply to the pre-validation (verification) phase.
Can I do my validation with another RTO? For example, I do their validation, and they do mine.
Yes, you can do that, but the bottom line is that the panel or team need to collectively hold the required skills, knowledge and industry competencies and currency. You might also want to make sure you sign a copyright agreement to avoid any complications.
One of the reasons that I do not do validation is it involves a lot of paperwork. Any tips to avoid the paperwork?
The best suggestion we can give you is this. You need to have

  • A proper schedule that is distributed over a period of time,
  • Have a risk matrix to identify and prioritise your validation,
  • Be proactive. The more you do it frequently and on time, the more it allows you to identify any gap and early delivery that ensures it is filled before affecting future students.

I have validation policies and procedures and plans; however, I am deemed non-compliant repetitively; am I missing something?
Yes, almost all RTOs have validation policies and procedures. However, the method does not articulate and demonstrate in detail what they must do, how they will do it, when they will do it, who is responsible for doing what, the mechanism for monitoring, and the evidence they can provide.
If there is a considerable gap in the interaction between your policies and the actual practice, systems and continuous improvement, you will likely be deemed non-compliant.
What are the documents that I need to demonstrate compliance with in my validation?
There is no prescribed list required as per the SRTO 2015; however, as per the recently much promoted ASQA’s approach on self-assurance and ASQA’s newly released approach to assessing performance (March 2021), you have to demonstrate the following:
How you systematically monitor your training and assessment strategies and practices to ensure ongoing compliance and how you systematically evaluate and use the validation outcomes, client trainer and assessor feedback and complaints and appeals.
Accordingly, as part of your evidence to demonstrate your system for ensuring ongoing compliance with the standard 1.9 – 1.11, and 1.25 (TAE) you must demonstrate

  • The validation schedule and how it is implemented
  • How you identified your validation team, including the industry experts
  • The validation outcomes and recommendations for improvement
  • The rectification plan developed, and how it was incorporated in the assessment tool and practice
  • Sample size and the randomly selected files

By demonstrating the above, you will demonstrate your commitment and capability to proactively check your assessment practices and address issues as they arise and remain compliant in the future.


For more information, please call CAQA or email us at info@caqa.com.au.

Post Views: 111

[ruby_related total=5 layout=5]

Previous Article The websites that will help you become much more productive and efficient.
Next Article Fact Sheet: Transition and teach out
EduTodayEduToday

© 2022 EduToday. Online Media Solutions. All Rights Reserved.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?