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Evidence Guide: CPPSIS5050A - Create engineering drawings

Student: __________________________________________________

Signature: _________________________________________________

Tips for gathering evidence to demonstrate your skills

The important thing to remember when gathering evidence is that the more evidence the better - that is, the more evidence you gather to demonstrate your skills, the more confident an assessor can be that you have learned the skills not just at one point in time, but are continuing to apply and develop those skills (as opposed to just learning for the test!). Furthermore, one piece of evidence that you collect will not usualy demonstrate all the required criteria for a unit of competency, whereas multiple overlapping pieces of evidence will usually do the trick!

From the Wiki University

 

CPPSIS5050A - Create engineering drawings

What evidence can you provide to prove your understanding of each of the following citeria?

Prepare computer-aided design (CAD) environment.

  1. Objectives,deliverables, constraints and principal work activities are defined and documented according to the written spatial data specifications and legislative requirements.
  2. System variables are customised to suit standard operating procedures.
  3. Relevant manuals, instructions and operating procedures for software and hardware being used are obtained according to workplace procedures.
  4. Menus are customised to suit standard operating procedures.
  5. Drawing defaults are customised to suit the applicable drafting standards and procedures.
Objectives,deliverables, constraints and principal work activities are defined and documented according to the written spatial data specifications and legislative requirements.

Completed
Date:

Teacher:
Evidence:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

System variables are customised to suit standard operating procedures.

Completed
Date:

Teacher:
Evidence:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Relevant manuals, instructions and operating procedures for software and hardware being used are obtained according to workplace procedures.

Completed
Date:

Teacher:
Evidence:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Menus are customised to suit standard operating procedures.

Completed
Date:

Teacher:
Evidence:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Drawing defaults are customised to suit the applicable drafting standards and procedures.

Completed
Date:

Teacher:
Evidence:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Assessed

Teacher: ___________________________________ Date: _________

Signature: ________________________________________________

Comments:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Instructions to Assessors

Evidence Guide

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 Package.

Overview of assessment

This unit of competency could be assessed on its own or in combination with other units relevant to the job function, for example CPPSIS5049A Conduct an engineering surveying project.

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

A person who demonstrates competency in this unit must be able to provide evidence of:

assessing and recording information from varied engineering sources

performing a range of tasks where choice between a substantial range of options is required

operational knowledge in a broad range of CAD environments.

Specific resources for assessment

Resource implications for assessment include access to:

assessment instruments, including personal planner and assessment record book

assignment instructions, work plans and schedules, policy documents and duty statements

registered training provider of assessment services

relevant guidelines, regulations and codes of practice

suitable venue and equipment.

Access must be provided to appropriate learning and assessment support when required.

Where applicable, physical resources should include equipment modified for people with disabilities.

Context of assessment

Holistic: based on the performance criteria, evidence guide, range statement, and required skills and knowledge.

Method of assessment

Demonstrated over a period of time and observed by the assessor (or assessment team working together to conduct the assessment).

Demonstrated competency in a range of situations, that may include customer/workplace interruptions and involvement in related activities normally experienced in the workplace.

Obtained by observing activities in the field and reviewing induction information. If this is not practicable, observation in realistic simulated environments may be substituted.

Guidance information for assessment

Assessment requires that the clients’ objectives and industry expectations are met. If the clients’ objectives are narrowly defined or not representative of industry needs, it may be necessary to refer to portfolio case studies of a variety of surveying and spatial information services requirements to assess competency.

Oral questioning or written assessment and hypothetical situations (scenarios) may be used to assess underpinning knowledge (in assessment situations where the candidate is offered a preference between oral questioning or written assessment, questions are to be identical).

Supplementary evidence may be obtained from relevant authenticated correspondence from existing supervisors, team leaders or specialist training staff.

All practical demonstration must adhere to the safety and environmental regulations relevant to each State or Territory.

Where assessment is for the purpose of recognition (recognition of current competencies [RCC] or recognition of prior learning [RPL]), the evidence provided will need to be authenticated and show that it represents competency demonstrated over a period of time.

In all cases where practical assessment is used it will be combined with targeted questioning to assess the underpinning knowledge.

Assessment processes will be appropriate to the language and literacy levels of the candidate and any cultural issues that may affect responses to the questions, and will reflect the requirements of the competency and the work being performed.

Required Skills and Knowledge

This section describes the essential skills and knowledge and their level, required for this unit.

Required skills

ability to create, extract and output information from engineering plans

communication skills to:

consult effectively with clients and colleagues

impart knowledge and ideas through oral, written and visual means

computer skills to apply surveying software

literacy skills to:

assess and use workplace information

locate and interpret written documentation

prepare and manage documentation

read and write technical reports

research and evaluate

numeracy skills to:

analyse errors

perform mental calculations

record with accuracy and precision

organisational skills to prioritise activities to meet contractual requirements

spatial skills to:

exercise precision and accuracy in relation to spatial and aspatial data design

archive and retrieve spatial data

manage and manipulate spatial data

manage files

Required knowledge

data formats

data management

industry requirements and standards

organisational policies and guidelines

planning and control processes

road design software

spatial reference systems

standard plan design and presentation conventions

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 below. Add any 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.

Objectives may include:

client requirements

written survey data specifications.

Legislative requirements may include:

relevant state, territory and federal legislation affecting organisational operations, including:

anti-discrimination and diversity

industrial relations.

Drawings may include:

charts

diagrams

plans.

Entity refers to a single item created on the screen such as:

arc

circle

hatch

line

text.

Attributes are properties associated with an entity and may include:

colour

layer

level

line type

line width

text.

Products may include:

aspect maps

line of sight maps

slope maps

visualisation estimation

volume estimation.

3-D space may include:

line of sight (intervisibility) map

fly through products.

Formats may include:

DXF (data exchange format)

PTS (a format used in the triangulation process to define the position of points and triangles)

XLS (Excel spreadsheet format).

Supplementary data may include:

area

volumes

lengths

angles

perimeters.

Required documentationmay include:

field records

final product reports

survey plots.

Organisational guidelines may include:

appropriate timelines

final product formats

format design parameters

particular requirements for data processing.

Relevant personnelmay include:

supervisors and managers

site personnel

surveyors.

Project specifications refer to:

detailed technical descriptions of the survey data and its requirements.