Criterion 3 · Welcome, support, monitoring and assessmentMajor non-conformityNew-entrant accommodation

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

  1. Revisit your objectives/assessment table (indicator 5) and check every objective has a concrete, ready-to-use measuring tool.
  2. Build your tools: a marked final quiz, a scenario grid with observable criteria, a marking scheme. The level of demand must match the service.
  3. Systematise the final assessment: it is built into the teaching plan, scheduled, and nobody leaves the pathway without an assessment trace.
  4. Issue compliant end-of-course certificates: identity, title, dates, duration, objectives and attainment results. Ban attendance-only certificates for training actions.
  5. 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.

Evidence file

The evidence the auditor expects

  1. P.1Final assessment tools: marked quizzes, scenario grids, graded case studies
  2. P.2Mapping table between the service's objectives and the assessment methods
  3. P.3Individual results archived in beneficiary files (scores, papers, completed grids)
  4. P.4End-of-course certificates stating the objectives and attainment results
  5. P.5Entry-vs-final comparisons demonstrating progress
  6. P.6Skills-assessment summary documents or VAE jury preparation traces
  7. P.7For a new entrant: a finished assessment system ready to deploy
Points of vigilance

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)
Frequently asked questions

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.

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