ATU-CPAC Quality Assurance Manual
Arab Trainers Union Council for Professional Accreditation and Certification
Version 1/2026
Effective Date: 1 June 2026
Controlled Quality Assurance Document
1. Document Control
Document Title: ATU-CPAC
Quality Assurance Manual
Owner: Arab Trainers Union
Council for Professional Accreditation and Certification
Issuing Authority: Arab
Trainers Union
Implementation Authority:
ATU-CPAC Governing Council
Quality Assurance Authority:
ATU-CPAC Quality Assurance and Compliance Committee
Approval Authority: ATU
Board of Directors, where required
Review Cycle: Annually, or
earlier where required by legal change, ATU Board decision, quality assurance
findings, risk events, partner requirements, stakeholder feedback, or
operational need.
Controlled Status: This manual is a controlled quality assurance
document. Uncontrolled copies must not be used for official assessment,
accreditation, certification, audit, or compliance decisions.
2. Purpose of the Manual
This Quality Assurance Manual
establishes the quality assurance framework for the Arab Trainers Union Council
for Professional Accreditation and Certification, referred to as ATU-CPAC.
The manual defines the systems,
principles, procedures, responsibilities, controls, evidence requirements,
monitoring processes, reporting mechanisms, and improvement arrangements
required to ensure that ATU-CPAC activities are credible, consistent, transparent,
impartial, evidence-based, and aligned with the authority of the Arab Trainers
Union.
The manual applies to:
- Provider accreditation.
- Professional certification.
- Assessed training programs.
- Assessment design and delivery.
- Internal quality assurance.
- External quality assurance.
- Trainer, assessor, IQA, and EQA approval.
- Certification decision-making.
- Certificate issuance controls.
- Digital verification and registry accuracy.
- Complaints, appeals, malpractice, and
maladministration.
- Partner compliance.
- Continuous improvement.
3. Institutional Quality Assurance Statement
ATU-CPAC operates as a
specialized council within the Arab Trainers Union. Its role is to regulate,
govern, monitor, review, verify, and assure the quality of professional
accreditation, professional certification, assessed training certificates,
standards, assessments, registries, and compliance processes.
All certificates, professional
certifications, assessed certificates, accreditation certificates, digital
badges, registry confirmations, and verification letters governed by ATU-CPAC
are issued in the name and under the authority of the Arab Trainers Union.
ATU-CPAC quality assurance exists
to protect:
- The credibility of ATU-issued credentials.
- The integrity of professional certification
decisions.
- The consistency of provider accreditation decisions.
- The fairness of assessment.
- The reliability of quality assurance judgments.
- The accuracy of registries and verification systems.
- The confidence of learners, professionals, providers,
employers, partners, and public stakeholders.
4. Quality Assurance Policy
ATU-CPAC is committed to
implementing a robust, documented, risk-based, evidence-based, and continuously
improving quality assurance system.
The quality assurance system
shall ensure that:
- Standards are clear, current, measurable, and fit for
purpose.
- Providers are approved and monitored against defined
criteria.
- Trainers are competent and certified by the Arab
Trainers Union where required.
- Assessors are competent, approved, impartial, and
trained.
- Assessments are valid, reliable, fair, secure, and
aligned with learning outcomes or competency requirements.
- Internal quality assurance confirms consistency and
fairness before certification decisions are finalized.
- External quality assurance independently monitors
compliance and performance.
- Certification and accreditation decisions are based
on verified evidence.
- Registry and verification systems are accurate and
secure.
- Complaints, appeals, malpractice, and non-compliance
are managed fairly and transparently.
- Corrective and preventive actions are tracked and
verified.
- Continuous improvement is embedded in all ATU-CPAC
operations.
5. Quality Assurance Principles
ATU-CPAC quality assurance shall
be guided by the following principles.
5.1 Integrity
All quality assurance activities
shall protect the credibility of ATU, ATU-CPAC, providers, certified
professionals, and issued credentials.
5.2 Consistency
Standards, assessment criteria,
rubrics, audits, sampling, and decisions shall be applied consistently across
providers, programs, candidates, assessors, and countries.
5.3 Impartiality
Quality assurance decisions shall
be free from bias, personal interest, improper influence, commercial pressure,
conflict of interest, or unfair advantage.
5.4 Transparency
Quality requirements, assessment
methods, evidence expectations, approval rules, monitoring procedures, and
decision criteria shall be communicated clearly.
5.5 Validity
Assessments and reviews shall
measure what they are intended to measure and shall be aligned with approved
standards, learning outcomes, competency frameworks, or professional
requirements.
5.6 Reliability
Assessment and quality assurance
judgments shall produce consistent outcomes when applied by competent
assessors, reviewers, IQAs, and EQAs.
5.7 Fairness
Candidates, providers, trainers,
assessors, and partners shall be treated fairly and given access to reasonable
procedures for feedback, complaints, appeals, and review.
5.8 Evidence-Based Decisions
All accreditation, certification,
assessment, quality assurance, suspension, withdrawal, and registry decisions
shall be supported by documented evidence.
5.9 Confidentiality
Assessment materials, candidate
records, provider records, audit reports, committee deliberations, complaints,
appeals, and registry data shall be protected.
5.10 Continuous Improvement
Quality assurance findings shall
be used to improve standards, training, assessment, provider performance,
registry accuracy, partner compliance, and ATU-CPAC operations.
6. Scope of Quality Assurance
This manual applies to all
quality assurance activities related to:
- Approved Provider status.
- Accredited Provider status.
- Premier Accredited Provider status.
- Authorized Assessment Center status.
- Accredited Training Program status.
- Accredited Professional Program status.
- Authorized Delivery Partner status.
- Professional certification levels.
- Assessed training certificates.
- Certificate of Achievement pathways.
- Professional assessments.
- Assignments, projects, examinations, portfolios,
practical tasks, and interviews.
- Trainers, assessors, IQAs, EQAs, reviewers, auditors,
and technical experts.
- ATU and ATU-CPAC registries.
- Arab Experts Portal entries where applicable.
- Partner-endorsed or jointly delivered programs.
- Transition review of existing ATU accredited centers
and certified trainers.
7. Quality Assurance Governance Structure
ATU-CPAC quality assurance shall
operate through a clear structure.
7.1 ATU Board of Directors
The ATU Board provides ultimate
oversight of ATU-CPAC and approves major policies, standards, and strategic
quality assurance decisions where required.
7.2 ATU President
The ATU President provides
institutional leadership, signs official documents where authorized, issues
appointment letters, and approves urgent actions where required to protect ATU
authority, certificate integrity, or public trust.
7.3 Secretary General
The Secretary General coordinates
implementation, supports governance oversight, supervises administrative
coordination, and may act according to delegated authority.
7.4 ATU-CPAC Governing Council
The Governing Council oversees
the quality assurance framework, approves quality assurance procedures within
delegated authority, monitors performance, reviews risks, and receives quality
assurance reports.
7.5 Quality Assurance and
Compliance Committee
The Quality Assurance and
Compliance Committee is responsible for monitoring implementation of this
manual, reviewing quality assurance reports, approving sampling plans,
monitoring corrective actions, and escalating significant quality concerns.
7.6 Standards and Frameworks
Committee
The Standards and Frameworks
Committee ensures that standards, competency frameworks, assessment criteria,
rubrics, and quality assurance requirements are current, clear, measurable, and
fit for purpose.
7.7 Provider Accreditation
Committee
The Provider Accreditation
Committee reviews provider quality evidence, accreditation audit reports,
renewal evidence, conditions, corrective actions, and compliance
recommendations.
7.8 Certification and
Assessment Committee
The Certification and Assessment
Committee oversees assessment design, assessor approval, assessment security,
moderation, standardization, certification evidence, and certification decision
recommendations.
7.9 Ethics, Impartiality, and
Professional Conduct Committee
This committee reviews conflicts
of interest, professional conduct matters, ethical breaches, malpractice,
misrepresentation, and impartiality risks.
7.10 Digital Verification and
Registry Committee
This committee monitors
certificate numbering, registry accuracy, digital badges, QR verification,
certificate status updates, and correction of registry errors.
7.11 External Quality Assurers
EQAs conduct independent
monitoring, sampling, provider visits, evidence reviews, assessment reviews,
and compliance reporting.
7.12 Internal Quality Assurers
IQAs review the quality and
consistency of assessment decisions, assessor practice, candidate evidence,
provider assessment systems, and implementation of approved assessment
requirements.
8. Quality Assurance Roles and Responsibilities
8.1 ATU-CPAC Governing Council
Responsibilities
The Governing Council shall:
- Approve the quality assurance strategy.
- Review quality assurance performance reports.
- Monitor high-risk providers, programs, and
certification schemes.
- Approve major corrective actions where required.
- Review recurring quality failures.
- Escalate serious matters to ATU leadership.
- Ensure adequate resources for quality assurance.
- Safeguard impartiality and public confidence.
8.2 Quality Assurance and
Compliance Committee Responsibilities
The committee shall:
- Develop and monitor QA procedures.
- Approve annual QA plans.
- Review IQA and EQA reports.
- Monitor corrective action plans.
- Review risk-based sampling outcomes.
- Recommend sanctions or restrictions.
- Review complaints and malpractice trends.
- Report to the Governing Council.
8.3 Provider Responsibilities
Providers shall:
- Comply with ATU-CPAC standards.
- Maintain an internal quality assurance system.
- Use only approved programs, materials, assessments,
and trainers.
- Ensure trainers are certified by the Arab Trainers
Union where required.
- Maintain accurate learner and assessment records.
- Protect assessment security.
- Support learners fairly.
- Submit evidence for review.
- Cooperate with audits, visits, sampling, and
monitoring.
- Implement corrective actions within deadlines.
- Avoid misleading public claims.
- Report malpractice, complaints, appeals, and
significant changes.
8.4 Trainer Responsibilities
Trainers shall:
- Be certified by the Arab Trainers Union where
required.
- Deliver approved content.
- Follow approved program specifications.
- Support learner achievement.
- Explain assessment requirements.
- Maintain attendance and participation records.
- Maintain professional conduct.
- Avoid misleading learners.
- Cooperate with quality assurance reviews.
- Report learner concerns, malpractice, or assessment
irregularities.
8.5 Assessor Responsibilities
Assessors shall:
- Be approved by the provider and, where required, by
ATU-CPAC.
- Understand assessment criteria and rubrics.
- Make fair and evidence-based judgments.
- Provide clear feedback.
- Maintain assessment records.
- Protect assessment confidentiality.
- Declare conflicts of interest.
- Participate in standardization.
- Cooperate with IQA and EQA.
- Avoid assessing candidates where impartiality is
compromised.
8.6 IQA Responsibilities
Internal Quality Assurers shall:
- Verify assessment decisions before certification
recommendation where required.
- Sample assessment evidence.
- Review assessor feedback.
- Monitor assessor consistency.
- Identify assessment risks.
- Support standardization.
- Report findings.
- Track corrective actions.
- Confirm readiness for EQA.
- Escalate significant quality concerns.
8.7 EQA Responsibilities
External Quality Assurers shall:
- Conduct independent quality reviews.
- Sample candidate evidence and assessment records.
- Review IQA effectiveness.
- Review provider compliance.
- Verify assessment and certification readiness.
- Identify nonconformities.
- Recommend conditions or sanctions.
- Confirm corrective action closure.
- Provide formal reports to ATU-CPAC.
- Support continuous improvement.
9. Quality Assurance Cycle
ATU-CPAC shall apply a continuous
quality assurance cycle.
9.1 Plan
Define standards, criteria,
resources, responsibilities, timelines, risk controls, sampling plans,
assessment methods, and quality indicators.
9.2 Implement
Deliver programs, assessments,
provider reviews, certifications, registry processes, monitoring, and support
according to approved procedures.
9.3 Assure
Conduct IQA, EQA, audit,
sampling, moderation, standardization, evidence review, data checks, and
compliance monitoring.
9.4 Decide
Make accreditation,
certification, renewal, suspension, withdrawal, or improvement decisions based
on verified evidence.
9.5 Improve
Use findings, feedback,
complaints, appeals, data, risk analysis, and performance indicators to improve
standards, procedures, tools, training, and controls.
10. Quality Standards Framework
ATU-CPAC quality assurance shall
be based on the approved standards framework.
10.1 Provider Accreditation
Standards
These define the institutional,
governance, operational, quality assurance, trainer, assessor, learner support,
assessment, records, and compliance requirements for providers.
10.2 Professional
Certification Standards
These define eligibility,
competency, assessment, evidence, certification levels, renewal, ethics, CPD,
and registry requirements.
10.3 Assessment Standards
These define validity,
reliability, fairness, security, grading, feedback, moderation,
standardization, and appeals requirements.
10.4 Assessed Training Program
Standards
These define learning outcomes,
training design, assessment criteria, trainer requirements, learner support,
delivery controls, and certificate rules.
10.5 Internal Quality
Assurance Standards
These define IQA planning,
sampling, assessor monitoring, standardization, evidence review, corrective
actions, and reporting requirements.
10.6 External Quality
Assurance Standards
These define EQA independence,
provider visits, external sampling, audit reporting, risk classification,
corrective actions, and compliance decisions.
10.7 Ethics and Professional
Conduct Standards
These define integrity, honesty,
impartiality, professional conduct, conflicts of interest, malpractice, misuse
of credentials, and sanctions.
10.8 Digital Verification and
Registry Standards
These define certificate
numbering, QR verification, registry fields, public status, data accuracy,
digital badges, and record correction.
10.9 Partner Compliance
Standards
These define partner recognition,
joint delivery, branding, reporting, quality requirements, assessment controls,
and compliance obligations.
11. Provider Quality Assurance
Provider quality assurance
ensures that approved and accredited providers have the capacity, systems,
staff, records, and quality controls needed to deliver ATU-CPAC-governed
programs.
11.1 Provider Approval
Evidence
Providers shall submit evidence
covering:
- Institutional identity and legal status.
- Governance and leadership structure.
- Quality assurance policy.
- Internal quality assurance arrangements.
- Trainer and assessor qualifications.
- ATU certification of trainers where required.
- Program specifications.
- Assessment strategy.
- Learner support policy.
- Complaints and appeals procedure.
- Malpractice and plagiarism procedure.
- Records and data protection arrangements.
- Facilities or digital learning platform.
- Marketing and public information.
- Financial and operational capacity.
- Partner arrangements where applicable.
11.2 Provider Risk
Classification
Providers shall be classified by
risk level.
|
Risk Level |
Description |
QA Response |
|
Low |
Strong evidence, stable performance, minor issues only |
Standard monitoring |
|
Medium |
Some conditions, new provider, moderate findings |
Increased sampling and follow-up |
|
High |
Serious findings, repeated non-compliance, weak IQA, malpractice risk |
Intensive monitoring, conditions, suspension consideration |
|
Critical |
Certificate integrity, fraud, major risk, refusal to cooperate |
Urgent escalation and possible suspension |
11.3 Provider Monitoring
Methods
Monitoring may include:
- Desktop review.
- Remote audit.
- On-site visit.
- Assessment sampling.
- Learner feedback review.
- Trainer and assessor interview.
- IQA records review.
- EQA visit.
- Public claims check.
- Registry verification check.
- Corrective action review.
- Partner compliance review.
11.4 Provider Renewal
Provider renewal shall be based
on:
- Continued compliance.
- Quality assurance records.
- Assessment performance.
- Learner outcomes.
- Complaints and appeals history.
- Corrective action closure.
- Registry accuracy.
- Public claims compliance.
- Trainer and assessor currency.
- Payment of approved fees where applicable.
12. Program Quality Assurance
All assessed training programs,
accredited training programs, and accredited professional programs shall be
quality assured before approval and during delivery.
12.1 Program Approval Evidence
Programs shall include:
- Program title.
- Purpose and target audience.
- Level and scope.
- Entry requirements.
- Learning outcomes.
- Competency framework where applicable.
- Curriculum structure.
- Duration and delivery mode.
- Trainer requirements.
- Assessment strategy.
- Assessment criteria.
- Grading rules.
- Rubrics.
- Learner resources.
- Quality assurance arrangements.
- Certificate title and wording.
- Registry rules.
- Renewal or CPD requirements where applicable.
12.2 Program Review
Programs shall be reviewed:
- Before launch.
- After first delivery.
- Annually.
- After major feedback.
- After assessment concerns.
- After partner changes.
- After standards updates.
- After sector or market changes.
12.3 Program Changes
Material changes require approval
before implementation, including changes to:
- Program title.
- Learning outcomes.
- Assessment method.
- Pass mark.
- Duration.
- Delivery mode.
- Trainer requirements.
- Certificate title.
- Partner recognition.
- Registry status.
- Fees where regulated.
- Renewal requirements.
13. Assessment Quality Assurance
Assessment quality assurance
ensures that all assessments are valid, reliable, fair, secure, and appropriate
for the credential being awarded.
13.1 Assessment Design
Requirements
Assessment instruments shall
include:
- Assessment purpose.
- Learning outcomes or competency standards.
- Assessment criteria.
- Candidate instructions.
- Assessor instructions.
- Marking scheme.
- Rubric.
- Pass mark.
- Time limit where applicable.
- Evidence requirements.
- Submission rules.
- Academic integrity rules.
- Reasonable adjustment guidance.
- Feedback requirements.
- Appeals information.
13.2 Assessment Validation
Assessment instruments shall be
validated before use to confirm:
- Alignment with learning outcomes.
- Appropriate level of difficulty.
- Clarity of instructions.
- Fairness for candidates.
- Suitability of assessment method.
- Adequacy of evidence.
- Reliability of marking criteria.
- Security requirements.
- Accessibility.
- Absence of bias.
13.3 Assessment Methods
Approved methods may include:
- Multiple-choice examination.
- Written examination.
- Case study.
- Assignment.
- Practical task.
- Professional project.
- Portfolio of evidence.
- Observation.
- Presentation.
- Professional interview.
- Workplace evidence.
- Reflective report.
13.4 Assessment Security
Assessment security controls
shall include:
- Controlled access to assessment materials.
- Version control.
- Secure storage.
- Candidate identity checks.
- Controlled examination environment.
- Plagiarism checks where applicable.
- AI-use declaration where applicable.
- Proctoring where required.
- Restricted assessor access.
- Incident reporting.
- Secure result processing.
- Secure disposal of obsolete assessment materials.
14. Assessment Decision Quality
Assessment decisions shall be
based on sufficient, authentic, current, relevant, and valid evidence.
14.1 Evidence Rules
Candidate evidence shall be:
- Valid: linked to the required criteria.
- Authentic: produced by the candidate.
- Sufficient: enough to support judgment.
- Current: recent enough for the credential.
- Reliable: capable of consistent assessment.
- Relevant: directly related to the required
competency.
- Traceable: documented and stored.
14.2 Grading Rules
Grading shall follow approved
rubrics and may include:
- Pass / Fail.
- Competent / Not Yet Competent.
- Excellent / Good / Acceptable / Not Achieved.
- Percentage score.
- Level-based award.
- Distinction / Merit / Pass where approved.
14.3 Assessor Feedback
Assessor feedback shall be:
- Clear.
- Constructive.
- Linked to criteria.
- Evidence-based.
- Professional.
- Useful for improvement.
- Consistent with the final decision.
15. Internal Quality Assurance
Internal Quality Assurance is the
process of checking the consistency, fairness, validity, and reliability of
assessment practice before final certification recommendations are confirmed.
15.1 IQA Objectives
IQA shall:
- Confirm assessment decisions are valid and
consistent.
- Monitor assessor performance.
- Verify use of approved rubrics.
- Check evidence sufficiency.
- Identify assessor training needs.
- Detect malpractice or maladministration risks.
- Ensure candidate feedback quality.
- Confirm certification readiness.
- Support continuous improvement.
15.2 IQA Planning
Each provider or program shall
maintain an IQA plan including:
- Programs covered.
- Assessors covered.
- Candidates or samples selected.
- Assessment methods included.
- Sampling rationale.
- Risk factors.
- IQA schedule.
- IQA responsibilities.
- Reporting method.
- Corrective action follow-up.
15.3 IQA Sampling
Sampling shall be risk-based and
representative.
Sampling should consider:
- New assessors.
- New programs.
- New providers.
- High-stakes certification.
- Borderline results.
- Failed candidates.
- High pass rates.
- Low pass rates.
- Complaints or appeals.
- Previous nonconformities.
- Assessment method variety.
- Candidate diversity.
- Delivery mode.
- Partner requirements.
15.4 Minimum IQA Sampling
Guidance
|
Risk Level |
Suggested Sampling |
|
Low |
Representative sample across
assessors and assessment methods |
|
Medium |
Increased sample including
borderline and failed work |
|
High |
Significant sample with all new
assessors and high-risk decisions |
|
Critical |
Full review or certification
hold until resolved |
15.5 IQA Outcomes
IQA outcomes may include:
- Assessment decision confirmed.
- Assessment decision adjusted.
- Additional evidence required.
- Assessor feedback required.
- Standardization required.
- Reassessment required.
- Certification recommendation withheld.
- Malpractice investigation required.
- Corrective action plan required.
- Referral to ATU-CPAC.
16. External Quality Assurance
External Quality Assurance
provides independent assurance that providers, programs, assessments, and
certification decisions meet ATU-CPAC standards.
16.1 EQA Objectives
EQA shall:
- Monitor provider compliance.
- Review assessment quality.
- Verify IQA effectiveness.
- Confirm assessment decision consistency.
- Review certificate readiness.
- Identify systemic risks.
- Verify corrective actions.
- Protect ATU certificate integrity.
- Support provider improvement.
- Report independent findings to ATU-CPAC.
16.2 EQA Activities
EQA may include:
- Provider visit.
- Remote review.
- Candidate evidence sampling.
- Assessment paper review.
- Assignment review.
- Interview with trainers and assessors.
- IQA file review.
- Candidate feedback review.
- Registry record review.
- Public claims review.
- Facilities or LMS review.
- Partner compliance review.
16.3 EQA Report
The EQA report shall include:
- Provider name.
- Program or credential reviewed.
- Date and method of review.
- Scope of review.
- Evidence sampled.
- Strengths.
- Findings.
- Nonconformities.
- Risks.
- Required actions.
- Recommendations.
- Certification release recommendation where
applicable.
- Follow-up requirements.
- EQA signature.
16.4 EQA Decisions
EQA may recommend:
- Continue approval.
- Continue with conditions.
- Increase monitoring.
- Require corrective action.
- Hold certification release.
- Suspend provider scope.
- Withdraw approval.
- Refer for investigation.
- Escalate to Governing Council.
17. Standardization and Moderation
Standardization and moderation
ensure that assessors and quality assurers apply standards consistently.
17.1 Standardization Meetings
Standardization meetings shall be
held:
- Before new assessment delivery.
- After first assessment cycle.
- When new assessors are appointed.
- Where marking inconsistency is detected.
- Where assessment criteria are updated.
- After appeals or complaints.
- At least annually for active programs.
17.2 Standardization Records
Records shall include:
- Date.
- Participants.
- Assessment materials reviewed.
- Sample work reviewed.
- Decisions made.
- Agreed interpretation of criteria.
- Actions required.
- Follow-up responsibilities.
17.3 Moderation
Moderation may include:
- Pre-assessment review of instruments.
- Post-assessment review of marking.
- Review of borderline cases.
- Review of failed cases.
- Review of high-scoring cases.
- Cross-assessor comparison.
- Statistical result review.
- Adjustment recommendation where justified.
18. Trainer, Assessor, IQA, and EQA Approval
ATU-CPAC shall define and monitor
competence requirements for all personnel involved in delivery, assessment, and
quality assurance.
18.1 Trainer Requirements
Trainers delivering
ATU-CPAC-governed assessed training programs must:
- Be certified by the Arab Trainers Union where
required.
- Have subject knowledge.
- Have relevant practical experience.
- Have instructional competence.
- Understand the program learning outcomes.
- Understand assessment requirements.
- Maintain professional conduct.
- Cooperate with QA reviews.
- Maintain CPD where required.
18.2 Assessor Requirements
Assessors shall demonstrate:
- Subject competence.
- Assessment competence.
- Understanding of rubrics.
- Ability to make evidence-based judgments.
- Impartiality.
- Confidentiality.
- Feedback skills.
- Participation in standardization.
- Compliance with ATU-CPAC assessment rules.
18.3 IQA Requirements
IQAs shall demonstrate:
- Assessment knowledge.
- Quality assurance competence.
- Ability to sample evidence.
- Ability to monitor assessors.
- Ability to identify nonconformities.
- Reporting competence.
- Understanding of ATU-CPAC standards.
- Impartiality and confidentiality.
18.4 EQA Requirements
EQAs shall demonstrate:
- Independence from the provider under review.
- External review competence.
- Sector expertise.
- Understanding of accreditation and certification
standards.
- Audit and sampling skills.
- Reporting skills.
- Ability to identify risk.
- Ethical conduct and impartiality.
19. Candidate and Learner Quality Assurance
Candidates and learners shall
receive fair, clear, and accurate information.
19.1 Candidate Information
Candidates shall be informed of:
- Program title.
- Certification or certificate type.
- Issuing authority.
- Entry requirements.
- Learning outcomes.
- Assessment methods.
- Pass mark.
- Submission rules.
- Academic integrity rules.
- Reasonable adjustment process.
- Result notification process.
- Appeals process.
- Certificate validity.
- Renewal or CPD requirements where applicable.
- Registry and verification rules.
19.2 Learner Support
Providers shall ensure:
- Clear induction.
- Access to learning resources.
- Assessment guidance.
- Technical support for digital delivery.
- Reasonable adjustment where applicable.
- Feedback opportunities.
- Complaints and appeals access.
- Protection from misleading claims.
20. Reasonable Adjustments and Special Consideration
ATU-CPAC supports fair access to
assessment while protecting the validity and integrity of the credential.
20.1 Reasonable Adjustments
Reasonable adjustments may
include:
- Additional time.
- Accessible format.
- Assistive technology.
- Alternative room arrangement.
- Reader or scribe where appropriate.
- Modified assessment delivery method where validity is
not compromised.
20.2 Special Consideration
Special consideration may be
reviewed where a candidate experiences circumstances that affect assessment
performance, such as serious illness, emergency, or verified disruption.
20.3 Controls
Adjustments and special
consideration shall:
- Be requested through approved procedures.
- Be supported by evidence where required.
- Not compromise standards.
- Be recorded.
- Be applied fairly.
- Be subject to IQA or EQA review.
21. Malpractice and Maladministration
ATU-CPAC shall investigate
suspected malpractice and maladministration.
21.1 Malpractice Examples
Malpractice may include:
- Cheating.
- Plagiarism.
- Impersonation.
- Falsified evidence.
- Unauthorized use of assessment materials.
- Collusion.
- Misuse of AI tools where prohibited.
- Bribery or improper influence.
- False certificate claims.
- Misrepresentation of ATU or ATU-CPAC status.
- Unauthorized certificate issuance.
- Misuse of logos, seals, QR codes, or digital badges.
21.2 Maladministration
Examples
Maladministration may include:
- Poor record keeping.
- Incorrect candidate registration.
- Late result processing.
- Failure to follow assessment procedures.
- Failure to conduct IQA.
- Failure to report conflicts of interest.
- Incorrect certificate data.
- Failure to protect assessment security.
- Failure to implement corrective actions.
21.3 Investigation Process
The process shall include:
- Report received.
- Initial risk review.
- Evidence secured.
- Conflict-of-interest check.
- Investigation appointed.
- Parties notified where appropriate.
- Evidence reviewed.
- Findings documented.
- Decision made.
- Action implemented.
- Registry updated where required.
- Appeal rights communicated where applicable.
- Lessons learned recorded.
21.4 Possible Actions
Actions may include:
- Warning.
- Candidate disqualification.
- Reassessment.
- Result cancellation.
- Certificate hold.
- Certificate withdrawal.
- Provider corrective action.
- Provider suspension.
- Assessor or trainer suspension.
- Registry status change.
- Public correction notice.
- Referral to ATU leadership.
- Legal action where required.
22. Complaints and Appeals Quality Assurance
Complaints and appeals are
quality assurance tools and shall be analyzed for improvement.
22.1 Complaints
Complaints may relate to:
- Provider service.
- Trainer conduct.
- Assessment administration.
- Candidate support.
- Misleading claims.
- Registry errors.
- Certificate delay.
- Partner delivery.
- Quality assurance decisions.
22.2 Appeals
Appeals may relate to:
- Assessment result.
- Certification decision.
- Accreditation decision.
- Suspension decision.
- Withdrawal or revocation decision.
- Rejection of application.
- Scope limitation.
22.3 Appeal Timeline
Appeals should be submitted
within 15 days from notification of the decision unless an approved procedure
states otherwise.
22.4 Quality Assurance Use
Complaints and appeals shall be
reviewed to identify:
- Assessment inconsistency.
- Unclear instructions.
- Provider weakness.
- Assessor training needs.
- Registry errors.
- Policy gaps.
- Communication weakness.
- Systemic risk.
23. Certificate Issuance Quality Controls
Certificates shall only be issued
after required quality assurance steps are completed.
23.1 Pre-Issuance Checks
Before issuing a certificate, the
following shall be verified:
- Candidate identity.
- Eligibility.
- Completion of required training where applicable.
- Assessment result.
- IQA confirmation where required.
- EQA release where required.
- Payment of approved fees where applicable.
- Correct certificate title.
- Correct candidate name.
- Correct credential level.
- Correct issue date.
- Correct expiry date where applicable.
- Correct certificate number.
- Correct signatory.
- Correct registry entry.
- Correct partner statement where applicable.
23.2 Certificate Status
Certificate status may include:
- Active.
- Pending.
- Expired.
- Suspended.
- Withdrawn.
- Revoked.
- Replaced.
- Corrected.
- Under review.
23.3 Certificate Correction
Certificate correction shall
require:
- Error report.
- Evidence of correct data.
- Approval by delegated authority.
- Cancellation or marking of incorrect version.
- New certificate number or corrected version record
where required.
- Registry update.
- Notification to the certificate holder.
24. Digital Registry and Verification Quality Assurance
ATU-CPAC shall maintain quality
controls over all registry and verification systems.
24.1 Registry Quality
Requirements
Registry data shall be:
- Accurate.
- Complete.
- Current.
- Secure.
- Traceable.
- Verifiable.
- Protected.
- Correctable through approved procedures.
24.2 Registry Review
Registry records shall be
reviewed:
- Before publication.
- After certificate issuance.
- During renewal.
- During suspension or withdrawal.
- After complaints or correction requests.
- During internal audit.
- During EQA review.
- At least annually.
24.3 Public Verification
Public verification shall
confirm:
- Certificate holder or provider name.
- Certificate or accreditation title.
- Certificate number.
- Issue date.
- Expiry date where applicable.
- Status.
- Scope or specialization.
- Verification source.
- Limitations where applicable.
24.4 Registry Error Management
Errors shall be:
- Reported.
- Logged.
- Investigated.
- Corrected.
- Approved.
- Documented.
- Communicated to affected stakeholders.
- Reviewed for root cause.
25. Partner Compliance Quality Assurance
Where ATU-CPAC works with
international or regional partners, partner compliance shall be quality
assured.
25.1 Partner QA Requirements
Partner arrangements shall
include:
- Approved scope.
- Written agreement.
- Quality responsibilities.
- Assessment rules.
- Certificate wording.
- Logo and branding rules.
- Data sharing rules.
- Registry rules.
- Reporting requirements.
- Monitoring arrangements.
- Termination or suspension conditions.
25.2 Partner Monitoring
Partner activities may be
monitored through:
- Document review.
- Delivery review.
- Assessment sampling.
- Candidate feedback.
- Public claims check.
- Certificate review.
- Registry check.
- Joint review meeting.
- Corrective action plan.
- Annual partner compliance report.
26. Data Protection and Confidentiality Quality Assurance
ATU-CPAC shall ensure quality
controls over personal data and confidential records.
26.1 Protected Information
Protected information includes:
- Candidate personal data.
- Provider records.
- Assessment evidence.
- Examination papers.
- Marking schemes.
- Rubrics.
- IQA reports.
- EQA reports.
- Complaints.
- Appeals.
- Investigation files.
- Committee minutes.
- Partner information.
- Registry data.
26.2 Access Control
Access shall be based on:
- Role.
- Authority.
- Need to know.
- Confidentiality agreement.
- Data protection requirements.
- Security controls.
26.3 Data Quality
Data shall be checked for:
- Accuracy.
- Completeness.
- Duplication.
- Correct spelling.
- Correct certificate number.
- Correct status.
- Correct expiry.
- Correct scope.
- Correct partner statement where applicable.
27. Records Management Quality Assurance
Records shall be maintained to
demonstrate compliance, traceability, and accountability.
27.1 Required QA Records
Required records include:
- QA plans.
- IQA plans.
- IQA sampling records.
- EQA reports.
- Provider audit reports.
- Assessment validation records.
- Assessor standardization records.
- Candidate assessment evidence.
- Certification decision records.
- Certificate issuance checks.
- Registry records.
- Complaints and appeals records.
- Malpractice investigation records.
- Corrective action plans.
- Risk register.
- Management review reports.
- Committee minutes.
- Partner compliance reports.
27.2 Record Retention
Records shall be retained
according to ATU policy, applicable legal requirements, partner requirements,
and operational needs.
27.3 Record Security
Records shall be protected
through:
- Secure storage.
- Controlled access.
- Backup where applicable.
- Version control.
- Retention schedule.
- Secure disposal.
- Audit trail.
28. Risk-Based Quality Assurance
ATU-CPAC shall apply risk-based
quality assurance.
28.1 Quality Risk Categories
Quality risks include:
- Weak provider governance.
- Unqualified trainers.
- Unqualified assessors.
- Poor assessment design.
- Inconsistent marking.
- Weak IQA.
- Lack of EQA.
- Assessment security breaches.
- Malpractice.
- Misleading public claims.
- Registry errors.
- Data protection breaches.
- Partner non-compliance.
- Certificate misuse.
- High complaint or appeal rates.
28.2 Risk Triggers
Risk level may increase where
there is:
- New provider status.
- New program launch.
- High candidate volume.
- High-stakes certification.
- High pass rate.
- Low pass rate.
- Repeated appeals.
- Complaints.
- Late corrective actions.
- Staff changes.
- Assessment irregularities.
- Public claim violations.
- Partner concern.
- Registry correction frequency.
28.3 Risk Response
Risk response may include:
- Increased sampling.
- Additional EQA visit.
- Certification hold.
- Conditions.
- Corrective action plan.
- Assessor retraining.
- Provider monitoring.
- Suspension of scope.
- Referral to investigation.
- Escalation to Governing Council.
29. Nonconformity and Corrective Action
ATU-CPAC shall classify and
manage nonconformities.
29.1 Nonconformity Categories
|
Category |
Description |
Example |
|
Minor |
Limited issue with low risk |
Missing signature on one IQA form |
|
Major |
Significant failure affecting quality or compliance |
No IQA conducted for assessed program |
|
Critical |
Serious risk to certificate integrity or public trust |
Unauthorized certificate issuance or falsified assessment evidence |
29.2 Corrective Action Process
The corrective action process
shall include:
- Identify nonconformity.
- Classify severity.
- Notify responsible party.
- Require root cause analysis.
- Approve corrective action.
- Set deadline.
- Implement action.
- Verify evidence.
- Confirm effectiveness.
- Close action.
- Update risk register.
- Report unresolved actions.
29.3 Preventive Action
Preventive action may include:
- Training.
- Procedure update.
- Additional guidance.
- Assessment redesign.
- Increased standardization.
- Increased sampling.
- Provider support.
- Registry system improvement.
- Communication update.
- Policy revision.
30. Internal Audit
ATU-CPAC shall conduct internal
audits to verify compliance with this manual and related standard.
30.1 Audit Scope
Internal audits may cover:
- Governance of QA.
- Provider accreditation files.
- Certification files.
- Assessment records.
- IQA records.
- EQA records.
- Registry records.
- Certificate issuance controls.
- Complaints and appeals.
- Malpractice records.
- Data protection.
- Partner compliance.
- Corrective action tracking.
- Public information and branding.
30.2 Audit Frequency
Internal audits shall be
conducted at least annually, with additional audits for high-risk areas.
30.3 Audit Report
Audit reports shall include:
- Audit scope.
- Audit date.
- Auditor.
- Evidence reviewed.
- Findings.
- Nonconformities.
- Good practice.
- Required actions.
- Deadlines.
- Responsible owners.
- Follow-up date.
31. Management Review
ATU-CPAC shall conduct formal
management review to evaluate the effectiveness of the quality assurance
system.
31.1 Management Review Inputs
Inputs shall include:
- QA performance data.
- Provider monitoring outcomes.
- Assessment results.
- IQA reports.
- EQA reports.
- Audit findings.
- Complaints and appeals.
- Malpractice cases.
- Registry performance.
- Partner compliance.
- Risk register.
- Corrective action status.
- Stakeholder feedback.
- Resource needs.
- Standards review findings.
- Legal or regulatory changes.
31.2 Management Review Outputs
Outputs shall include:
- Quality improvement actions.
- Policy updates.
- Standards updates.
- Training needs.
- Resource decisions.
- Risk treatment actions.
- Provider monitoring decisions.
- Assessment improvement decisions.
- Registry improvement decisions.
- Escalation to ATU Board where required.
32. Quality Performance Indicators
ATU-CPAC shall monitor quality
using indicators.
32.1 Suggested Quality KPIs
|
Area |
KPI |
|
Provider QA |
Percentage of provider reviews completed on time |
|
Accreditation |
Number of providers approved, conditioned, suspended, or withdrawn |
|
Assessment |
Assessment pass rates by program |
|
IQA |
Percentage of assessment decisions sampled |
|
EQA |
Percentage of EQA actions closed on time |
|
Assessor Quality |
Number of assessor standardization sessions completed |
|
Complaints |
Average complaint resolution time |
|
Appeals |
Appeal rate and appeal outcome trends |
|
Registry |
Registry error rate |
|
Certificate Integrity |
Number of certificate misuse cases |
|
Partner Compliance |
Partner findings closed on time |
|
Continuous Improvement |
Corrective action closure rate |
|
Learner Experience |
Candidate satisfaction rate |
|
Risk |
Number of high-risk providers under monitoring |
32.2 KPI Reporting
KPI reports shall be submitted to
the Quality Assurance and Compliance Committee and the ATU-CPAC Governing
Council according to the approved reporting cycle.
33. Stakeholder Feedback and Quality Improvement
ATU-CPAC shall collect and
analyze stakeholder feedback.
33.1 Feedback Sources
Feedback may come from:
- Candidates.
- Learners.
- Certified professionals.
- Providers.
- Trainers.
- Assessors.
- IQAs.
- EQAs.
- Employers.
- Partners.
- Committee members.
- Public verification users.
- Complaints and appeals.
33.2 Feedback Use
Feedback shall be used to
improve:
- Standards.
- Assessment instructions.
- Program design.
- Learner support.
- Provider guidance.
- Certification procedures.
- Registry systems.
- Communication.
- Partner delivery.
- Quality assurance tools.
34. Public Information Quality Assurance
All public information shall be
reviewed to ensure accuracy and avoid misleading claims.
34.1 Public Information Review
The following shall be reviewed:
- Website content.
- Provider public claims.
- Program brochures.
- Social media announcements.
- Certificate wording.
- Accreditation statements.
- Partner statements.
- Digital badge descriptions.
- Registry listings.
- Application forms.
34.2 Required Public Clarity
Public information shall clearly
state:
- ATU-CPAC is a specialized council within the Arab
Trainers Union.
- ATU is the issuing authority.
- ATU-CPAC regulates, assures, monitors, and verifies.
- Certification or accreditation does not replace
governmental licensing unless recognized by the competent authority.
- Verification is available through approved registry
systems.
- Partner recognition applies only within the approved
scope.
35. Transition Quality Assurance
ATU-CPAC shall apply quality
assurance to the transition of existing ATU accredited centers, certified
trainers, approved programs, and related credentials into the ATU-CPAC
framework.
35.1 Transition Review
Transition review may include:
- Existing accreditation status.
- Provider documentation.
- Trainer certification status.
- Program scope.
- Assessment arrangements.
- Quality assurance records.
- Public claims.
- Certificate records.
- Registry data.
- Compliance gaps.
35.2 Transition Outcomes
Possible outcomes include:
- Transition approved.
- Transition approved with conditions.
- Additional evidence required.
- Limited scope approval.
- Temporary approval.
- Reassessment required.
- Suspension pending compliance.
- Withdrawal where requirements are not met.
36. First-Year Quality Assurance Implementation Priorities
During the first year of
implementation, ATU-CPAC shall prioritize:
- Approval of this Quality Assurance Manual.
- Establishment of the Quality Assurance and Compliance
Committee.
- Approval of IQA and EQA procedures.
- Creation of QA forms and templates.
- Development of provider review checklists.
- Development of assessment validation templates.
- Establishment of assessor, IQA, and EQA approval
procedures.
- Creation of risk-based sampling plans.
- Review of current ATU accredited centers.
- Review of current ATU certified trainers.
- Creation of registry verification controls.
- Training of reviewers, assessors, IQAs, and EQAs.
- Launch of complaint, appeal, and malpractice
procedures.
- First internal audit cycle.
- First annual quality assurance report.
37. Annual Quality Assurance Calendar
|
Month |
Quality Assurance Activity |
|
January |
Approve annual QA plan and sampling priorities |
|
February |
Review provider risk classifications |
|
March |
Conduct provider documentation review |
|
April |
Conduct IQA review and assessor standardization |
|
May |
Conduct EQA visits or remote reviews |
|
June |
Mid-year QA performance report |
|
July |
Review assessment instruments and rubrics |
|
August |
Registry accuracy and certificate control audit |
|
September |
Partner compliance review |
|
October |
Internal audit cycle |
|
November |
Corrective action and risk review |
|
December |
Annual quality assurance report and improvement plan |
38. Quality Assurance Forms and Templates
ATU-CPAC shall maintain
controlled templates, including:
- Provider QA review checklist.
- Program approval checklist.
- Assessment validation form.
- Assessment sampling plan.
- Assessor approval form.
- Trainer approval form.
- IQA plan.
- IQA sampling form.
- IQA report.
- EQA visit plan.
- EQA report.
- Standardization meeting record.
- Candidate feedback form.
- Complaint form.
- Appeal form.
- Malpractice report form.
- Corrective action plan.
- Risk assessment form.
- Registry correction form.
- Certificate issuance checklist.
- Partner compliance review form.
- Internal audit report.
- Management review report.
Appendix A: IQA Sampling Template
|
Program |
Assessor |
Candidate Sample |
Assessment Method |
Risk Level |
IQA Finding |
Action Required |
Deadline |
Status |
|
Low / Medium / High |
Appendix B: EQA Report Template
|
Section |
Details |
|
Provider Name |
|
|
Program / Credential |
|
|
Review Date |
|
|
Review Method |
On-site / Remote / Desktop |
|
EQA Name |
|
|
Scope of Review |
|
|
Evidence Reviewed |
|
|
Strengths |
|
|
Nonconformities |
|
|
Risk Level |
|
|
Required Actions |
|
|
Certification Release Recommendation |
Yes / No / Conditional |
|
Follow-up Date |
|
|
EQA Signature |
Appendix C: Assessment Validation Checklist
|
Validation Area |
Yes / No |
Comments |
|
Assessment aligns with learning outcomes |
||
|
Assessment matches required level |
||
|
Instructions are clear |
||
|
Marking rubric is complete |
||
|
Evidence requirements are sufficient |
||
|
Assessment is fair and accessible |
||
|
Assessment is secure |
||
|
Assessment allows consistent marking |
||
|
Academic integrity controls are included |
||
|
Appeals information is included |
||
|
Assessment approved for use |
Appendix D: Corrective Action Plan Template
|
Finding |
Severity |
Root Cause |
Corrective Action |
Owner |
Deadline |
Evidence Required |
Verification |
Status |
|
Minor / Major / Critical |
Appendix E: Provider Monitoring Checklist
|
Area |
Evidence Required |
Status |
Comments |
|
Governance and leadership |
Organizational chart, policies, responsibilities |
||
|
Quality assurance system |
QA policy, IQA records, review reports |
||
|
Trainer competence |
Trainer CVs, ATU certification, CPD |
||
|
Assessor competence |
Assessor approval, training, standardization |
||
|
Assessment controls |
Assessment plans, rubrics, security records |
||
|
Learner support |
Induction, guidance, support records |
||
|
Complaints and appeals |
Procedures and logs |
||
|
Records management |
Candidate and assessment records |
||
|
Public information |
Website, brochures, claims |
||
|
Registry data |
Certificate and verification records |
||
|
Corrective actions |
CAPA log and evidence |
Appendix F: Certificate Issuance Checklist
|
Checkpoint |
Completed |
Notes |
|
Candidate identity verified |
||
|
Eligibility confirmed |
||
|
Assessment completed |
||
|
Result approved |
||
|
IQA completed where required |
||
|
EQA release completed where required |
||
|
Certificate title correct |
||
|
Candidate name correct |
||
|
Certificate number assigned |
||
|
Issue date correct |
||
|
Expiry date correct where applicable |
||
|
Signatory confirmed |
||
|
Registry entry created |
||
|
QR verification active |
||
|
Certificate released |
Appendix G: Quality Risk Register Template
|
Risk |
Category |
Likelihood |
Impact |
Score |
Controls |
Action |
Owner |
Deadline |
Status |
|
Assessment inconsistency |
Assessment |
IQA and standardization |
|||||||
|
Registry error |
Verification |
Dual review |
|||||||
|
Trainer not ATU certified |
Provider compliance |
Trainer approval review |
|||||||
|
Misleading provider claim |
Public information |
Public claims monitoring |
|||||||
|
Weak IQA system |
Quality assurance |
EQA review |
Final Quality Assurance Statement
ATU-CPAC quality assurance is
designed to protect the trust, credibility, consistency, fairness, and
professional value of ATU-issued credentials.
Through clear standards,
competent trainers and assessors, strong IQA, independent EQA, secure
assessment systems, accurate registries, transparent complaints and appeals,
and continuous improvement, ATU-CPAC shall ensure that professional
accreditation and certification activities are governed with integrity under
the authority of the Arab Trainers Union.



