Originally Posted by: WatsonD NCRQ is just an easy back-door qualification for those who cant do Nebosh. AND Just offering my opinion of the course. Only reason people choose NCRQ is because they don't want to do Nebosh. Not fake news. Unlike your in bold above.
I thought long and hard before deciding to reply to this. I didn't want to lengthen a pointless debate but feel I must. You are not giving an opinion on the course, you are spouting an opinion on the people who take it. But first lets deal with the comment I made about Nebosh syllabus changing to which you objected:
Originally Posted by: WatsonD Unlike your in bold above
It is not me saying that the Nebosh course has changed. It changed in early 2017, coincidentally following the introduction of NCRQ. The new D/ID unit (assessment) now sits closely to where the NCRQ assessment was when it was first accredited by IOSH in Jan 2016.
(on the subject of course quality) NCRQ's accreditation was overseen by Tim Briggs CFIOSH, a former IOSH president. Tim is (was) chair of IOSH’s professional standards committee (PSC). The PSC oversees the institution’s core curriculum, which he says allows IOSH to assess the validity of programmes and whether they meet the standards for the level of qualification they offer. I've spoken with Tim, he knows his eggs and doesn't mince his words. If he says NCRQ Dip is the equal of the Nebosh Dip, I think I'll take his word over yours thank you. By the by, there are over 50 providers in the UK providing courses that lead to GradIOSH status. Are they all for people who can't do Nebosh too? IOSH accepts that there are different routes to qualifications so people can pick a suitable course that fits into their lives and work patterns (not abilities)
What does the NEW NEBOSH Diploma Syllabus mean? NEBOSH have consulted widely with students, employers, professional bodies, course providers and principal examiners to ensure the revised qualifications are relevant for the needs and challenges of industry and practitioners (www.wata.co.uk )
From IOSH Magazine Nov 2016 discussing using exams to level competence:
The course specification for Leeds Beckett’s safety, health and environmental management BSc (for example) includes exams, but the university admits that “though very effective in testing recall and analytical ability, examinations can be a poor means to explore other skills”.
In 2015, NEBOSH surveyed 1,400 safety and health professionals, past and present students, employers, professional bodies, course providers, examiners and regulators. NEBOSH says its revised diploma syllabus, published in November 2015 and taught from September 2016, has changed to “re-emphasise a proportionate and sensible approach to risk and place greater emphasis on the leadership and soft skills required to influence change in an organisation”.
But most of all, I (and many others I'm sure) find your ill-considered comments about those who have taken or will take the NCRQ/NVQ or other routes into H&S, offensive and bordering on discrimination based on neuro diversion, thank God education has moved on since and my kids don't have to survive it anymore. (though in my case my choice was not based on my learning style, it was based on work commitments).
If someone's learning style is different to yours, that does not mean they must take an 'easy back-door route' and it doesn't mean they are any less qualified than you or in some way their ability is less than yours, and to suggest so is a totally unprofessional and inappropriate way to behave. If you don't like the course, say "I don't like the course", not " It's an easy back-door route for people who can't do Nebosh". It's not accurate, not funny, and not acceptable. We should be bringing all people to the table, not excluding them because one particular learning style is required to 'get Neboshed'
In any other case where someone (like me) chose a route because I liked the way it was offered/presented and I could fit it into my life (not because I can't do exams), for you to then rubbish my qualifications on a public forum is at best rude and insensitive, and at worst it will put off many people taking a route into H&S thus going against our joint aim to increase awareness of H&S in the workplace. There is no place for such outdated attitudes in modern society, it's elitism and bigotry.
Now can we please put this to bed. My Dip. is as big as your Dip. which is as big as everyone else's Dip. IOSH says so, the various examination boards say so, thankfully most employers are enlightened enough to say so. No more Dip. measuring competitions, I stopped that at primary school. Encourage everyone who asks for advice to take the route that suits them best. That is what a professional body of people should do.