Almost 600 individuals apply for The Guild’s ‘formal qualification’

Paul Offley

Close to 600 individuals working in Guild member offices have now registered their interest to complete an Ofqual-accredited Level-Three qualification for estate and lettings agents.

The organisation is preparing for the formal launch of its Ofqual-accredited, Level-Three and Level-Four qualifications for estate and lettings agents.

According to Paul Offley, The Guild’s compliance officer, a lot of work has been going on in the background ahead of the official launch.

Offley, who will be responsible for the initiative, along with The Guild’s head of engagement and development, Jennifer Scott-Reid, said: “We have had an amazing response from many members within the network, who eagerly await the launch of the qualification platform.

“Offering formal qualifications is something that the network has asked for and we are hard at work making sure that we are going to deliver a platform that will provide agents with the training they desire and will help further raise the standards within the sector.”

He adds that The Guild will be using Moodle, an open-source learning platform, to help deliver the learning activities.

Offley continued: “We wanted the learning and route to qualification to be one where it’s not just a case of selecting an answer from a selection of options, but rather about making sure agents ‘understand’ the question and the actions they need to take. It is for this reason, that we have decided we will be using assessments as our qualification criteria; getting agents to explain their actions and responses to specific questions.

“We are working with an established training company to ensure that all assessments are completed by a qualified assessor,” Offley added. “All the training material has now been written and videos produced, and we are now working on creating our own ‘Moodle’ experience, as well and building all the processes to make the qualification journey straightforward for users.”

He went one: “The other important part is that we wanted to create learning material, which was appropriate for the end users, especially reflecting some variances in legislation across England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. So, to help us we are recruiting a team of industry experts from our Membership who will form a quality and control panel, assisting us in reviewing the learning material to effectively confirm it is fit for purpose.”

“It really is such an exciting time to be able to offer an alternative route for agents to achieve a formal qualification and really to help individuals achieve greater results from their chosen career.”

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3 Comments

  1. jan - byers

    I hope it is better than the Propertymark effort which has a level 3 question asking where the rafters are located in a house

    I kid you not LOL

    The PM one is worthless a monkey could pass that

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  2. Richard Hair

    The Propertymark level 3 is only aimed at those entering the business. It is quite surprising to find out how many members of the public do not know what a rafter or purlin is!

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    1. jan - byers

      It is not a question that should be in an exam.

      These called exam is multiple choice.

      That is not even GCSE standard.

      The website says it takes 120 hours study over 12 months.

      That is 2.3 hours a week.

      My kids at primary school do more homework than that.

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