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Elements and Performance Criteria

  1. Plan seed collection
  2. Implement and monitor seed collection
  3. Review seed collection

Required Skills

This describes the essential skills and knowledge and their level required for this uni

Required skills include

comply with legislation regulations quality standards codes of practice and established safe practices and procedures relating to seed collection activities

use and maintain relevant tools machinery and equipment

identify problems and equipment faults and demonstrate appropriate response procedures

use appropriate communication and interpersonal techniques with colleagues and others including landholders and internal and external bodies and groups

collate and assess information against specified criteria

accurately record and report workplace information and maintain documentation

supervise operational staff and contractors to achieve specific outcomes

recognise common diseases pests and nutrition deficiencies

efficiently and safely manage the extraction of collected material

interpret numerical data and identify quantities and costings

write reports and submissions in appropriate style and format

Required knowledge and understanding includes

applicable Commonwealth State or Territory licensing legislative regulatory or certification requirements and codes of practice relevant to the full range of processes relating to seed collection operations

organisational and site standards requirements policies and procedures relating to seed collection activities

principles of cultural diversity and access and equity

environmental protection requirements including the safe disposal of waste material

legal training prerequisites and operational requirements for use of the collection method

established communication channels and protocols

problem identification and resolution

flowering biology of the target species

biological signs which indicate that the seed crop is ready to be collected

procedures to extract and handle seed from collected material

handling procedures of the seed crop after picking

procedures for recording reporting and maintaining workplace records and information

treatment and documentation requirements of extracted seed

collection methods climbing removal of branches with rifle elevated platform vehicles

appropriate mathematical procedures for estimation and measurement

KEY COMPETENCIES

ThesevenkeycompetenciesrepresentgenericskillsconsiderednecessaryforeffectiveparticipationbyanindividualintheworkplacePerformanceLevel atthislevel thecandidateisrequiredtoundertaketaskseffectivelyPerformanceLevel atthislevel thecandidateisrequiredtomanagetasksPerformanceLevel atthislevel thecandidateisrequiredtouseconceptsforevaluatingandreshapingtasks

Key Competency

Example of Application

Performance Level

How are ideas and information communicated

By communicating in simple language to confirm work requirements convey information to colleagues and report outcomes relating to seed collection activities

How can information be collected analysed and organised

By collecting organising and understanding information required to plan and implement seed collection operation

How are activities planned and organised

By organising and implementing seed collection activities in the correct sequence to complete within the designated timeframes

How is team work used

By using effective communication and interpersonal techniques with colleagues and others to maximise confidence satisfaction and productivity during seed collection operation

How are mathematical ideas and techniques used

By calculating time to complete tasks interpreting numerical data and determine quantities and costings

How are problem solving skills applied

By establishing safe and effective seed collection processes which anticipate likely problems to avoid wastage and downtime

How is the use of technology applied

By accessing and locating applicable legislative regulatory and environmental guidelines relevant to seed collection operation and complete and maintain documentation

Evidence Required

The Evidence Guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the Performance Criteria Required Skills and Knowledge the Range Statement and the Assessment Guidelines for this Training Packag

Overview of assessment

A person who demonstrates competency in this unit must be able to provide evidence that they can plan and supervise the implementation of seed collection activities within applicable environmental legislative and organisational guidelines

Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit

Comply with applicable Commonwealth State or Territory legislative and regulatory requirements and codes of practice including OHS environmental and organisational policies and procedures relevant to managing seed collection

Comply with applicable licensing or certification requirements

Communicate effectively using appropriate interpersonal techniques with colleagues and others

Develop measurable performance indicators specifications and targets and a seed collection plan within specified budgetary guidelines

Coordinate and schedule resources and manage the work of others to achieve specific outcomes

Monitor seed collection operation ensuring relevant quality standards are complied with

Document results from seed collection activities and prepare a report for dissemination to relevant personnel

Context of and specific resources for assessment

Competency is to be assessed in the workplace or realistically simulated workplace

Assessment is to occur under standard and authorised work practices safety requirements and environmental constraints

Assessment of essential underpinning knowledge other than confirmatory questions will usually be conducted in an offsite context

Assessment is to comply with relevant regulatory or Australian Standards requirements

The following resources should be made available

workplace location or simulated workplace

materials and equipment relevant to the management of seed collection operations

specifications and work instructions

Method of assessment

Assessment must satisfy the endorsed Assessment Guidelines of the FPI Training Package

Assessment must satisfy the endorsed Assessment Guidelines of the FPI05 Training Package

Assessment methods must confirm consistency and accuracy of performance over time and in a range of workplace relevant contexts together with application of underpinning knowledge

Assessment must be by direct observation of tasks with questioning on underpinning knowledge and it must also reinforce the integration of key competencies

Assessment methods must confirm the ability to access and correctly interpret and apply the essential underpinning knowledge

Assessment may be applied under projectrelated conditions real or simulated and require evidence of process

Assessment must confirm a reasonable inference that competency is able not only to be satisfied under the particular circumstance but is able to be transferred to other circumstances

Assessment may be in conjunction with assessment of other units of competency

The assessment environment should not disadvantage the candidate

Assessment practices should take into account any relevant language or cultural issues related to Aboriginality gender or language backgrounds other than English

Where the participant has a disability reasonable adjustment may be applied during assessment

Language and literacy demands of the assessment task should not be higher than those of the work role


Range Statement

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 in the Performance Criteria is detailed belo

OHS requirements are to be in accordance with Commonwealth, State or Territory legislation and regulations, and organisational safety policies and procedures. Requirements may include:

the use of personal protective equipment and clothing

safety equipment

first aid equipment

fire fighting equipment

hazard and risk control

elimination of hazardous materials and substances

safe forest practices including required actions relating to forest fire

manual handling including shifting, lifting and carrying

Legislative requirements are to be in accordance with applicable legislation from all levels of government that affect organisational operation. Requirements may include:

award and enterprise agreements

industrial relations

Australian Standards

confidentiality and privacy

OHS

the environment

equal opportunity

anti-discrimination

relevant industry codes of practice

duty of care

heritage and traditional land owner issues

Organisational requirements

may include legal, organisational and site guidelines, quality standards for seed collection, policies and procedures relating to own role and responsibility, quality assurance, procedural manuals, quality and continuous improvement processes and standards, OHS, emergency and evacuation, ethical standards, recording and reporting, access and equity principles and practices, equipment use, maintenance and storage, environmental management (waste disposal, recycling and re-use guidelines)

Seed

may be of a native or non-native species

Seed collection

work is undertaken in seed orchards, forests, soft and hardwoods, rainforest, understorey plants

Environmental protection measures

may relate to hygiene of the area, relevant national, State and local legislation and regulations

may include ground growth, canopy, general forest lean, wind speed and direction, fallen trees, density of trees, ground slope, soil and water protection, ground hazards and obstacles. Measures may also include contingencies for modifying operations during wet or other adverse weather conditions

Seed characteristics

may include provenance, potential growth characteristics, forest types, optimum time to collect, physiology/biology, dormancy, species

Implementation issues

may include scheduling, people and skills involved, materials, hazards, seed quantities and selection

Opportunities

for seed collection may be identified from field observation, organisational and other relevant information

Method

may be selected based on consideration of the geography of the local area, size and type of tree(s), available resources, organisational guidelines

of seed collection may include collecting after falling or felling, ladders, climbing, shaking, high-powered rifles, cherry pickers

Impacts

may relate to requirements for genetic diversity, frost, heat, salt hardiness, potential growth characteristics

Approvals

may be required where heritage and other issues may apply to seed collection operation

Plan

may detail organisational terminology, guidelines, plans, budgets, policies and timelines, internal memos, resources (people, materials, equipment)

Appropriate personnel

may include those who will collect the seed (organisational employees, contractors, community groups), clients, colleagues, line management

Resources

may include people, materials, equipment

Documentation requirements

may relate to provenance, seed species and location, identity of collector, weight of seed collected

Individuals, bodies and groups

may include landholders, federal, state, or local government authorities, private individuals

Checks

may include ensuring relevant organisational OHS procedures, practices, policies and precautions are observed and followed, site environmental requirements comply with relevant national, State and local legislation and regulations, performance indicators, targets and specifications are met, the quantity, cost and provenances collected accord with plan specifications, required organisational documentation is completed clearly and accurately

Communication

may include verbal and non-verbal language, constructive feedback, active listening, questioning to clarify and confirm understanding, use of positive, confident and cooperative language, use of language and concepts appropriate to individual social and cultural differences, control of tone of voice and body language

Limitations

may relate to job role and responsibilities, own competency level, industry requirements, own understanding of risk identification processes, own interpretation of legislation, regulations and procedures, complying with OHS requirements

Records and reports

may include difficulties or issues faced, any recommendations for future work, results, costs, collation (of information or documentation), interpret information in a way relevant to workplace requirements, organise and maintain records accurately, utilise a full range of information media (written, printed, oral, electronic, hand goals, visual display units, personal computers)

may be manual, using a computer-based system or another appropriate organisational communication system