recognition of prior learning and experience the case of the ditsela fetc:tup learnership
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Recognition of Prior Learning and Experience
The Case of the Ditsela FETC:TUP Learnership
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
Contents
Promise of RPL… Reality of education today… Hope springs eternal… role of RPL Purpose of RPL in TUP learnership Principles Methodology Assessment
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
The promise of RPL…
Personal development and/or certification of current skills without progression into a learning programme,
Progression into a learning programme, using RPL to fast-track progression through the learning programme;
Promotion; and Career or job change
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
The reality…
RPL implicated in unequal distribution of resources for learning
2009 matric results, the worst since 1994 - official failure rate is 39.4%,
The real failure rate, is 78% (Sunday Independent 2010/01/10).
45% drop out rate in adult literacy 23% of 14-18 year olds not in school 50% first time undergraduates drop out
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
The Role of RPL in the TUP
Human thought develops NOT from the individual to the social, but from the social to the individual!
Formalise recognition of knowledge, skills, experience and values in TU movement by: Providing a valid and reliable basis for
the recognition and development of union knowledge, skills and ways of learning
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
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Affirming and acknowledging the rich and diverse range of learning activities, methods and languages used in unions
Affirming and acknowledging the particular nature of union activity in the production of union knowledge, skills and values
Providing the tools to access and succeed in the formal and work based learning of TUP:
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
Purpose
Challenge and enrich the content and methodology with aspects of union knowledge and skills that contest or complement current outcomes specified in the TUP
Develop strategies for engaging that which ‘does not fit’ squarely into the curriculum or the given set of assessment criteria
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
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Teach how to recognise and engage the different rules and requirements of the structured course work and work based components of the TUP
Provide a valid, reliable and efficient process for the formal assessment and giving credit to the knowledge and skills acquired outside of but equivalent to the outcomes of the FETC:TUP
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
Principles
In design and implementation of the TUP curriculum:
to know what participants know and can do
include provision for engagement with prior formal and experiential learning before introducing new material
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
Methodology
Affirms unions as strongest communities of practice Definition; ‘People with particular identity, value
orientation and purpose’ Walker and Parker There is a strong sense of shared values
and beliefs, a consciousness of and commitment to an overall holistic purpose that shapes its activities
An agreement on the set of practices that constitute competent practice
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
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Communities of practice emphasise the social and constructive
nature of learning learning is simultaneously a path to
knowledge, initiation into a community of practitioners
and a shaping of one’s identity
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
RPL as Assessment
RPL closely related to but not the same as assessment
Access to qualification is open with assumption of maths literacy and communication at NQF Level 3
Qualification may be achieved in part or in full through RPL
Presentation for W&RSETA 28th April 2010
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Assessment for credit of prior /certified and or experiential learning available on request for learners
Participants who successfully challenge for credit will be asked to stay on the programme as mentors or advisors to others on the module
Final assessment in the form of activist conversation based on RPL practice
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