Learning Levels and Course Approval Standards

IPLSO Learning Levels and Course Approval Standards

How IPLSO Learning Levels Are Allocated

International Professional Learning Standards Organisation (IPLSO) allocates learning levels based on demonstrated and assessed competence, not on marketing language, course duration, or perceived difficulty.

An IPLSO Learning Level reflects the highest level of capability that is formally assessed and verifiably evidenced at the conclusion of a course.

Levels exist to provide employers, organisations, and learners with a clear and trustworthy benchmark of competence, not a promotional label.

Rubber stamp marking “Level 3 – Advanced” on a course materials folder, representing course approval  levels allocation and verified professional competence.

The Core Standard

Time indicates participation.
Levels indicate verified competence.

  • Learning hours represent engagement and scope
  • Learning levels represent what a learner can demonstrably do

A course level is determined solely by assessed outcomes and evidence, not by content volume or presentation style.

As a result:

  • A short programme may achieve a higher level if it verifies advanced competence
  • A long programme may remain a lower level if it verifies knowledge only

The Basis for Level Allocation

IPLSO allocates learning levels using a competence-based standard that considers:

  • the learning outcomes a learner must achieve
  • the method used to assess those outcomes
  • the complexity of application required
  • the evidence produced to verify competence

If any element does not support a claimed level, the level is adjusted accordingly.

What Does Not Determine a Learning Level

The following factors do not influence IPLSO level allocation:

  • Course length or number of learning hours
  • Use of terms such as “advanced”, “professional”, or “expert”
  • Attendance or completion without assessment
  • Reflection journals or worksheets that are not formally assessed
  • Provider size, reputation, or brand recognition

Learning levels are allocated based on competence and proof, not presentation.

IPLSO Learning Levels

Level 1 – Foundation

Purpose: Foundational understanding
Learner capability: Recognises, defines, and explains core concepts
Assessment approach: Knowledge-based checks
Evidence: Demonstrated understanding of fundamental principles

Level 1 confirms awareness and basic comprehension.

Level 2 – Applied

Purpose: Correct application
Learner capability: Applies learning correctly in routine or predictable contexts
Assessment approach: Scenario-based knowledge checks or guided applied tasks
Evidence: Correct application when structure or guidance is provided

Level 2 confirms functional application, not independent judgement.

Level 3 – Advanced

Purpose: Professional judgement
Learner capability: Analyses situations, evaluates options, and justifies decisions
Assessment approach: Applied tasks, case-based assessment, or structured portfolios
Evidence: Reasoned decisions supported by verifiable evidence

Level 3 confirms the ability to manage complexity and exercise judgement.

Level 4 – Specialist

Purpose: Specialist or leadership-level competence
Learner capability: Designs, evaluates, oversees, or audits practice within a defined scope
Assessment approach: Moderated portfolios, verified workplace evidence, or oral assessment
Evidence: Demonstrated expert judgement with accountability

Level 4 confirms specialist competence.
It does not imply licensure, statutory authority, or professional registration.

Assessment Integrity

Unassessed Learning Does Not Raise a Level

Exercises, reflections, and practice activities support learning but do not influence level allocation unless formally assessed.

Levels are based on assessed competence.

MCQ-Only Assessment Is Limited

Knowledge-based assessments can verify understanding and routine application.
They cannot reliably verify professional judgement or specialist competence.

Courses seeking higher-level approval must include applied or verifiable evidence.

What an IPLSO Learning Level Signals

An IPLSO Learning Level provides a clear signal to organisations:

  • Level 1: Foundational understanding
  • Level 2: Reliable application in routine contexts
  • Level 3: Judgement in complex or non-routine situations
  • Level 4: Specialist competence and accountability

This supports:

  • training and skills benchmarking
  • competency mapping
  • procurement and due diligence
  • quality assurance and governance confidence

Summary

IPLSO learning levels are allocated using a competence-based benchmark:

Learning outcomes + assessment method + application complexity + verified evidence

Where a course’s assessment or evidence does not support a claimed level, the level will be adjusted to reflect the demonstrated standard.

Provider Submission Note

To ensure efficient and accurate review, course submissions should include:

  • clearly defined learning outcomes written as measurable competence statements
  • a description of assessment methods and verification approach
  • examples of assessment instruments or evidence templates
  • the type of evidence learners produce

Incomplete or unsupported submissions may result in level adjustment or delayed approval.