- MSL913002A - Plan and conduct laboratory_field work
Assessor Resource
MSL913002A
Plan and conduct laboratory_field work
Assessment tool
Version 1.0
Issue Date: June 2024
This unit of competency is applicable to instrument operators, laboratory assistants and technical assistants working in all industry sectors.
Industry representatives have provided case studies to illustrate the practical application of this unit of competency and to show its relevance in a workplace setting. These are found at the end of this unit of competency under the section 'This competency in practice'.
This unit of competency covers the ability to plan and complete tasks individually or in a team context. The tasks involve established routines and procedures using allocated resources with access to readily available guidelines and advice. Work plans may need to be modified with supervisor agreement to suit changing conditions and priorities.
You may want to include more information here about the target group and the purpose of the assessments (eg formative, summative, recognition)
Employability Skills
This unit contains employability skills.
Evidence Required
List the assessment methods to be used and the context and resources required for assessment. Copy and paste the relevant sections from the evidence guide below and then re-write these in plain English.
The Evidence Guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the performance criteria, required skills and knowledge, range statement and the Assessment Guidelines for the Training Package. | |
Overview of assessment | |
Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit | Assessors should ensure that candidates can: follow workplace procedures to achieve quality outcomes within timelines identify and resolve work problems work effectively with team members and promote cooperation and good relations prioritise activities and recognise potential disruptions or changed circumstances and modify the work plan in conjunction with relevant personnel. |
Context of and specific resources for assessment | This unit of competency is to be assessed in the workplace or simulated workplace environment. This unit of competency may be assessed with: MSL913001A Communicate with other people MSL943002A Participate in laboratory/field workplace safety technical units related to the tasks undertaken. Resources may include: enterprise procedures, equipment and materials for relevant technical tasks. |
Method of assessment | The following assessment methods are suggested: review of a flowchart prepared by the candidate to show efficient sequencing of tasks observation of the candidate performing a range of technical tasks over sufficient time to demonstrate their handling of a variety of contingencies review of documents detailing completed tasks, such as completed job cards, a report or suggestions for quality improvement feedback from peers and team members feedback from supervisors written or oral questions to partly assess the candidate's ability to handle a range of contingencies and work in a team environment. In all cases, practical assessment should be supported by questions to assess underpinning knowledge and those aspects of competency which are difficult to assess directly. Where applicable, reasonable adjustment must be made to work environments and training situations to accommodate ethnicity, age, gender, demographics and disability. Access must be provided to appropriate learning and/or assessment support when required. The language, literacy and numeracy demands of assessment should not be greater than those required to undertake the unit of competency in a work like environment. |
This competency in practice | Industry representatives have provided the case studies below to illustrate the practical application of this unit of competency and show its relevance in a workplace setting. Manufacturing A plastic processing plant had to halt production because of a suspect raw material. The plant manager immediately requested the polymer testing laboratory to test and identify all batches of polypropylene additives and colouring agents. The laboratory team of three assistants and one technical officer allocated the workload amongst themselves to conduct the twelve different tests within a period of four hours to identify the 'out of specification' materials and report them to the production supervisor. All laboratory assistants had to reschedule their workplan, perform the required tests and assist each other to solve the production problem. Biomedical As part of a routine sequence, a technical officer is required to perform a series of tasks, including the calibration of instruments required for testing of blood samples. These tasks are to be completed within a specified timeframe to meet the output requirements of the enterprise. During the calibration of one of the instruments, the technician experiences difficulties that require expert technical assistance. The problem is referred to the appropriate person and is quickly resolved. Consequently, the officer is able to complete all necessary tasks within the prescribed timeframe and the required output is maintained. Food processing Each of the technical assistants working in the laboratory of a food processing company was dedicated to performing specific analyses. As a result, they often alternated between periods of inactivity and excessive workload (the latter case had the potential to compromise their health and safety and the accuracy of their food analyses). One of the contributing factors to the periods of intense activity was the need to quickly prepare standard solutions and reagents. The team discussed this problem and agreed that while it was not appropriate for each assistant to become competent to perform every analytical procedure, it was feasible for each person to be able to prepare solutions and reagents used by others. The team developed a central register in which impending shortages of these materials was noted. Each assistant referred to this register when no other work was due and prepared the materials on a 'first in, first out' basis unless a task was given a priority rating. The team found that this strategy more evenly distributed the workload over their shift, improved safety in the laboratory and reduced the risk of error. |
Submission Requirements
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Assessment task 1: [title] Due date:
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Assessment Tasks
Copy and paste from the following data to produce each assessment task. Write these in plain English and spell out how, when and where the task is to be carried out, under what conditions, and what resources are needed. Include guidelines about how well the candidate has to perform a task for it to be judged satisfactory.
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Required skills |
Required skills include: conducting work based on ethical values and principles clarifying tasks and recognising resource needs following relevant procedures consistently recognising potential disruptions or changed circumstances and modifying work plan in conjunction with relevant personnel ability to adjust to a variety of working environments (indoor, outdoor and night) seeking assistance from relevant personnel when difficulties arise achieving quality outcomes within timelines working effectively with team members who may have diverse work styles, cultures and perspectives promoting cooperation and good relations in the team assisting team members to organise and manage its workload |
Required knowledge |
Required knowledge includes: enterprise procedures: customer service quality occupational health and safety (OHS) and environmental legislative requirements technical work that the candidate routinely performs workplace agreements and employment conditions: workers compensation industrial awards enterprise agreements equal employment opportunity anti-discrimination and anti-harassment ethical background relevant to the nature of the work: use of animals for research genetic modification, gene therapy, cloning and stem cells invitro fertilisation forensic testing of populations importance of commercial confidentiality problem solving strategies interpersonal communication and conflict resolution techniques relevant health, safety and environment requirements |
The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below. Essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) may also be included. | |
Codes of practice | Where reference is made to industry codes of practice, and/or Australian/international standards, it is expected the latest version will be used |
Standards, codes, procedures and/or enterprise requirements | Standards, codes, procedures and/or enterprise requirements may include: Australian and international standards such as: AS/NZS 2243 Set:2006 Safety in laboratories set AS/NZS ISO 14000 Set:2005 Environmental management standards set AS/NZS ISO 9000 Set:2008 Quality management systems set OHS national standards and codes of practice |
Ethical and professional work performance | Ethical and professional work performance includes: following enterprise policy and procedures, regulations and legislation behaving honestly and openly respecting others and treating them with courtesy and impartiality working diligently and responsibly ensuring confidentiality of information, including client identification and test results ensuring proprietary rights, intellectual property and copyright are protected clarifying personal values and ethics and analysing how they impinge on actions in the workplace |
Workplace activities | Workplace activities may include: setup and pre-use checks of laboratory equipment calibration status checks sampling and testing following standard procedures maintenance and cleaning tasks |
Workplace procedures | Workplace procedures may include: standard operating procedures (SOPs) job cards, batch cards and production schedules job descriptions methods, recipes, procedures and protocols |
Problem solving | Problem solving may include: accessing relevant documentation identifying inputs and outputs sequencing a process identifying and rectifying a problem step obtaining timely help implementing preventative strategies wherever possible |
Teams | Teams may: be ongoing with responsibility for particular services or functions be project based have a mixture of full and part-time employees and contractors, laboratory, construction and production personnel be separated by distance and work at sites outside laboratory facilities |
Team operation | Team operation may occur within: small, medium and large contexts internal and external environments enterprise guidelines covering access and equity principles and practices, licensing requirements, industrial awards, enterprise bargaining agreements and codes of practice agreed responsibility and accountability requirements appropriate goals, objectives given resource parameters |
Team tasks | Team tasks may vary according to: the size of enterprise the scope of the laboratory their level of responsibility |
Strategies to maintain work flow | Strategies to maintain work flow may include: communicating critical events on shift recognising shortages in reagents and problems with equipment communicating quality breakdowns recognising urgent and abnormal results to be processed communicating and behaving in a courteous manner being punctual |
Occupational health and safety (OHS) and environmental management requirements | OHS and environmental management requirements: all operations must comply with enterprise OHS and environmental management requirements, which may be imposed through state/territory or federal legislation - these requirements must not be compromised at any time all operations assume the potentially hazardous nature of samples and require standard precautions to be applied where relevant, users should access and apply current industry understanding of infection control issued by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and State and Territory Departments of Health |
Copy and paste from the following performance criteria to create an observation checklist for each task. When you have finished writing your assessment tool every one of these must have been addressed, preferably several times in a variety of contexts. To ensure this occurs download the assessment matrix for the unit; enter each assessment task as a column header and place check marks against each performance criteria that task addresses.
Observation Checklist
Tasks to be observed according to workplace/college/TAFE policy and procedures, relevant legislation and Codes of Practice | Yes | No | Comments/feedback |
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Clarify allocated work activities and required resources if necessary | |||
Prioritise work activities as directed | |||
Break down work activities into small achievable components and efficient sequences | |||
Review work plan in response to new information, urgent requests, changed situations or instructions from appropriate personnel | |||
Update work plan and communicate changes to appropriate personnel | |||
Locate relevant workplace procedures for required tasks | |||
Undertake tasks following prescribed and routine work related sequences | |||
Seek assistance from relevant personnel when difficulties cannot be handled | |||
Record completion of activities to confirm outputs in accordance with plan | |||
Recognise problems or opportunities for improved work performance | |||
Apply agreed problem solving strategies to consider possible causes and solutions | |||
Identify and access appropriate sources of help | |||
Consider available alternatives and keep them open before agreeing on the most appropriate action | |||
Cooperate with team members to negotiate and achieve agreed outcomes, timelines and priorities | |||
Recognise personal abilities and limitations when undertaking team tasks | |||
Confirm personal role and responsibility within the team for particular outputs | |||
Demonstrate sensitivity to the diversity of other team members' backgrounds and beliefs | |||
Recognise own strengths and weaknesses and take advantage of skill development opportunities |
Forms
Assessment Cover Sheet
MSL913002A - Plan and conduct laboratory_field work
Assessment task 1: [title]
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I declare that the assessment tasks submitted for this unit are my own work.
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Result: Competent Not yet competent
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Assessment Record Sheet
MSL913002A - Plan and conduct laboratory_field work
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Assessment task 1: [title] Result: Competent Not yet competent
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Feedback to student:
Overall assessment result: Competent Not yet competent
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