Indicator 11 — Assessing objective attainment
You must assess whether beneficiaries have achieved the service's objectives: measure, with suitable tools, whether the announced objectives are attained at the end of the pathway, and keep the results.
Applies to: OF · CFA · VAE · CBC
Indicator 11 closes the loop opened at indicator 5: you announced operational, measurable objectives — now you must prove you genuinely measure their attainment. Beware of the most widespread misreading: this is not about measuring satisfaction ("did you enjoy the course?") but acquisition ("were the objectives achieved?"). A core indicator with a major non-conformity, it benefits from a new-entrant accommodation.
What the auditor actually checks on the day
The auditor takes your programmes' objectives and asks, for each, how attainment is measured:
- The assessment tools: end-of-course quiz, practical scenarios with observation grids, marked case studies, certification exams, comparison between entry positioning and final assessment.
- Objective/assessment mapping: every operational objective must be covered by at least one assessment method. The mapping table prepared for indicator 5 serves directly here.
- Traced individual results: marked papers, scores, completed grids, end-of-course certificates stating the objectives and the level of attainment — a Labour Code requirement for training actions.
- Use of the results: what happens when a beneficiary does not reach the objectives? A catch-up session, a recommended complementary pathway, an explicit mention on the certificate.
- Specifics: for VAE, assessment covers the candidate's progress through the support (file ready, jury preparation done); for skills assessments, the formalised project and summary document; for apprenticeship, formative assessments at the centre and exam results.
Achieving compliance, step by step
- Revisit your objectives/assessment table (indicator 5) and check every objective has a concrete, ready-to-use measuring tool.
- Build your tools: a marked final quiz, a scenario grid with observable criteria, a marking scheme. The level of demand must match the service.
- Systematise the final assessment: it is built into the teaching plan, scheduled, and nobody leaves the pathway without an assessment trace.
- Issue compliant end-of-course certificates: identity, title, dates, duration, objectives and attainment results. Ban attendance-only certificates for training actions.
- Archive the results in beneficiary files and compile them: this data feeds your performance figures (indicator 2) and your continuous improvement (indicator 32).
The new-entrant case
If you have delivered nothing by the initial audit, the reading guide provides that the auditor assesses the planned system: built assessment tools, the objectives/assessment table, a certificate template stating attainment. Actual implementation — assessments really taken, results archived — is checked at the surveillance audit. So prepare finished tools, not intentions.
Field advice
First: the entry positioning / final assessment pair using the same tool is the framework's best value mechanism: it validates indicator 8 and indicator 11, and yields a striking progress measurement to show in the audit. Second: keep attainment assessment (indicator 11) and satisfaction surveys (indicator 30) separate; the two questionnaires must exist independently, with different purposes. Third: do not fear average results. A struggling beneficiary, traced and supported, proves your assessment system genuinely works — more credible than a 100% pass rate with no marked paper to show.
The evidence the auditor expects
- P.1Final assessment tools: marked quizzes, scenario grids, graded case studies
- P.2Mapping table between the service's objectives and the assessment methods
- P.3Individual results archived in beneficiary files (scores, papers, completed grids)
- P.4End-of-course certificates stating the objectives and attainment results
- P.5Entry-vs-final comparisons demonstrating progress
- P.6Skills-assessment summary documents or VAE jury preparation traces
- P.7For a new entrant: a finished assessment system ready to deploy
Common mistakes in audits
- Confusing attainment assessment with the end-of-course satisfaction questionnaire
- Announced objectives never assessed: no tool measures their attainment
- Attendance-only certificates with no objectives or results
- Assessment results not kept, hence unverifiable in an audit
- No follow-up planned for beneficiaries who miss the objectives
- An assessment tool unrelated to the objectives (the same generic quiz for every course)
FAQ — indicator 11
+How do you assess objective attainment for Qualiopi indicator 11?
With tools aligned with your operational objectives: a marked quiz, a practical scenario with an observation grid, a case study, a certification exam. Every objective must be covered, individual results traced and reported on the end-of-course certificate.
+Is the satisfaction questionnaire enough for indicator 11?
No — the most frequent audit mistake. Satisfaction measures perception (indicator 30); indicator 11 requires measuring acquisition: what the beneficiary can do at the end relative to the announced objectives. Two distinct mechanisms are needed.
+What must the end-of-course certificate contain?
The beneficiary's identity, the action's title and dates, its duration, its objectives and the attainment assessment results. This Labour Code document is direct evidence for indicator 11; an attendance-only certificate is insufficient.
+How does a new entrant pass indicator 11 with no beneficiaries?
Through the reading guide's new-entrant accommodation: you present the planned system — built assessment tools, objectives/assessment table, certificate template. Real application with archived results is verified at the surveillance audit.
- IND. 09Information about how the service will run
- IND. 10Delivering, monitoring and adapting the service
- IND. 12Learner engagement and dropout prevention
- IND. 13Coordinating work-linked learning
- IND. 14Apprentices' exercise of citizenship
- IND. 15Informing apprentices of their rights and duties
- IND. 16Registration and presentation for certification exams