Posted By Charley Farley-Trelawney
Alas, I fear you may have unnecessarily opened a can or worms, I say unnecessarily because I am far from clear on the point you attempt to make.
The NGC has never claimed by itself to create a H&S specialist, indeed, no course and exam make a trained specialist, this is why so many adverts request 'minimum' periods of field experience.
I have read carefully what the Nebosh site suggests you may expect from the certificate, it has not changed its stand point, and I have included the unabridged description for a precise response:
'The NEBOSH National General Certificate is a qualification designed to help those with health and safety responsibilities (eg. managers, supervisors and employee representatives) to discharge more effectively their organisational duties and functions. The NEBOSH National General Certificate is not a qualification for health and safety specialists, who should seek to obtain a professional qualification such as the Nebosh National Diploma'
It appears to make no false promise, so I am again unclear why you have included the word practitioner when it is not even in the Nebosh description; what is a practitioner? Is it not a Manager, Supervisor, employee rep looking after the company H&S needs and requirements?
Lets be clear here, anyone wishing to look after the H&S needs of a low risk industry would almost certainly require little more than the NGC with appropriate practical experience, it is also a great way of finding out that this could be the career for H&S generations to come, there are then many choices. Does it therefore follow that unless you do the diploma you are not qualified to be an H&S practitioner? I think not!
I feel certain there will be the responses that will compare a good NGC holder to a poor alternative holder, and they will be correct; what I am certain is that we must not put off anyone wishing to become a H&S practitioner on the basis they think the NGC is not valid!!
Of course it's valid, its a contemptible statement to suggest otherwise, its a start, if you wish to take this most wonderful of careers further; check out the many jobs advertised in SHP, NGC as a minimum, IOSH themselves as identified in an earlier response to this posting offer 'tech IOSH' with suitable CPD's.
I am certain, hours of exams in 'Management, Hazards, and Practical' for the NGC count for a great deal, and in my career I have met many great H&S aficionados who held little more than the NGC, and in each case they were great practitioners.
So what exactly was the point you were making, I see nothing on the Nebosh website that concurs with your bold but ambiguous statement?
With respect, what route did you yourself take to become an H&S Practitioner? I am curious.
Always, with complete respect for an individuals viewpoint.
CFT