ATU-CPAC Malpractice and Maladministration Policy
Arab Trainers Union Council for Professional Accreditation and Certification
Version 1/2026
Effective Date: 1 June 2026
Controlled Policy Document
1. Document Control
Document Title: ATU-CPAC Malpractice and
Maladministration Policy
Document Owner: ATU-CPAC Ethics, Impartiality, and Professional Conduct
Committee
Issuing Authority: Arab Trainers Union
Policy Authority: ATU-CPAC Governing Council
Approval Authority: Arab Trainers Union Board of Directors, where
required
Effective Date: 1 June 2026
Review Date: Every three years, or earlier where required
Applicability: ATU-CPAC, approved providers, accredited providers,
authorized assessment centers, candidates, learners, certified professionals,
trainers, assessors, IQAs, EQAs, reviewers, committee members, partners, and
all parties involved in ATU-CPAC-governed activities
2. Introduction
The Arab Trainers Union Council
for Professional Accreditation and Certification, referred to as ATU-CPAC, is a
specialized council operating within the Arab Trainers Union.
ATU-CPAC regulates, monitors,
quality assures, and verifies professional accreditation, professional
certification, assessed training programs, assessment systems, provider
performance, registry records, and compliance activities under the authority of
the Arab Trainers Union.
Malpractice and maladministration
threaten the credibility of ATU-issued credentials, the fairness of assessment,
the reliability of certification decisions, and the trust of learners,
candidates, providers, employers, partners, and public stakeholders.
All certificates, professional
certifications, accreditation certificates, assessed certificates, registry
confirmations, and verification records governed by ATU-CPAC are issued in the
name and under the authority of the Arab Trainers Union.
3. Purpose
This policy sets out how ATU-CPAC
prevents, identifies, reports, investigates, manages, records, and responds to
malpractice and maladministration.
The policy aims to:
- Protect
the credibility of ATU-issued credentials.
- Protect
the integrity of assessment, certification, accreditation, registry, and
verification processes.
- Ensure
malpractice and maladministration concerns are handled fairly and
consistently.
- Define
responsibilities for providers, candidates, trainers, assessors, IQAs,
EQAs, partners, and ATU-CPAC personnel.
- Support
timely reporting, investigation, corrective action, and sanction
decisions.
- Prevent
recurrence through quality assurance and continuous improvement.
- Protect
learners, candidates, certified professionals, providers, partners,
employers, and public trust.
4. Scope
This policy applies to malpractice and maladministration
related to:
- Provider
accreditation.
- Professional
certification.
- Assessment
and examination activities.
- Assessed
training programs.
- Certificates
of achievement.
- Accredited
training programs.
- Accredited
professional programs.
- Authorized
assessment centers.
- Internal
quality assurance.
- External
quality assurance.
- Registry
and digital verification.
- Certificate
issuance and certificate requests.
- Use of
ATU, ATU-CPAC, and partner names, marks, badges, QR codes, and public
claims.
- Partner-endorsed
or jointly supported activities where applicable.
- Transition
of existing ATU accredited centers and certified trainers into the
ATU-CPAC framework.
This policy applies to
face-to-face, online, blended, workplace-based, remote, and digital delivery or
assessment environments.
5. Policy Principles
ATU-CPAC malpractice and maladministration management shall
be guided by the following principles.
5.1 Integrity
All concerns shall be managed in a way that protects the
value, credibility, and trust of ATU-issued credentials.
5.2 Fairness
All parties shall be treated fairly and given an opportunity
to respond where appropriate.
5.3 Impartiality
Investigations and decisions shall be free from bias,
conflict of interest, improper influence, or commercial pressure.
5.4 Evidence-Based Decision-Making
Findings and actions shall be based on documented evidence,
assessment records, registry records, quality assurance findings, witness
statements, digital evidence, or other reliable information.
5.5 Proportionality
Actions shall be proportionate to the seriousness, intent,
recurrence, impact, risk, and evidence available.
5.6 Confidentiality
Reports, investigations, evidence, decisions, and personal
data shall be protected and shared only with authorized persons.
5.7 Timeliness
Concerns shall be reported and addressed promptly,
especially where certificate integrity, assessment security, data protection,
or public trust is at risk.
5.8 Continuous Improvement
Malpractice and maladministration findings shall be used to
improve standards, assessment controls, provider monitoring, IQA, EQA, registry
systems, and stakeholder guidance.
6. Malpractice
Malpractice means any act,
omission, misconduct, dishonesty, or improper practice that threatens the
integrity of accreditation, certification, assessment, quality assurance,
registry, or certificate issuance.
Malpractice may be committed by
candidates, learners, providers, trainers, assessors, IQAs, EQAs, reviewers,
partners, committee members, staff, or any person involved in ATU-CPAC-governed
activities.
7. Examples of
Candidate or Learner Malpractice
Candidate or learner malpractice may include:
- Cheating
in an examination or assessment.
- Plagiarism.
- Impersonation.
- Collusion
with another candidate or person.
- Submitting
work completed by another person.
- Falsifying
evidence, documents, experience, or qualifications.
- Unauthorized
use of assessment materials.
- Unauthorized
use of artificial intelligence tools where prohibited or not declared.
- Copying,
photographing, recording, or sharing assessment materials.
- Using
unauthorized notes, devices, websites, or support during assessment.
- Providing
false identity information.
- Altering
assessment feedback, results, certificates, badges, or registry records.
- Attempting
to influence an assessor, IQA, EQA, provider, or ATU-CPAC officer
improperly.
- Misusing
an ATU-issued certificate, title, badge, QR code, or registry record.
8. Examples of
Provider Malpractice
Provider malpractice may include:
- Delivering
unapproved programs as ATU-CPAC-approved or accredited.
- Operating
outside the approved scope.
- Using
unapproved trainers, assessors, IQAs, EQAs, or assessment materials.
- Failing
to ensure trainers are certified by the Arab Trainers Union where
required.
- Issuing,
promising, or advertising ATU certificates without authorization.
- Altering
ATU certificate templates, numbers, QR codes, seals, or verification
records.
- Submitting
false candidate completion or assessment data.
- Allowing
candidates to pass without meeting assessment requirements.
- Falsifying
attendance, assessment, IQA, EQA, or learner records.
- Misusing
ATU, ATU-CPAC, or partner names, logos, marks, or public claims.
- Concealing
complaints, appeals, malpractice, or serious incidents.
- Refusing
to cooperate with ATU-CPAC monitoring, IQA, EQA, audit, or investigation.
- Misrepresenting
accreditation, certification, partnership, recognition, or government
authority.
- Breaching
assessment security or sharing restricted assessment materials.
9. Examples of
Assessor, IQA, or EQA Malpractice
Assessor, IQA, or EQA malpractice may include:
- Making
assessment or quality assurance decisions without evidence.
- Ignoring
approved criteria, rubrics, or standards.
- Providing
unfair assistance to candidates.
- Failing
to declare a conflict of interest.
- Accepting
gifts, favors, payments, or improper influence.
- Altering
marks, feedback, IQA records, EQA findings, or results.
- Approving
certificate recommendations without proper review.
- Sharing
confidential assessment materials.
- Failing
to report suspected malpractice.
- Making
biased, discriminatory, or unsupported decisions.
- Misusing
ATU, ATU-CPAC, or partner status.
- Conducting
reviews outside approved competence or authority.
10.
Maladministration
Maladministration means poor
administration, failure to follow approved procedures, failure to maintain
required records, or poor management of accreditation, certification,
assessment, quality assurance, registry, or certificate processes.
Maladministration may be
intentional or unintentional. Serious, repeated, or uncorrected
maladministration may be treated as malpractice.
11. Examples of
Maladministration
Maladministration may include:
- Failure
to follow assessment procedures.
- Failure
to verify candidate identity.
- Failure
to keep accurate learner or candidate records.
- Incorrect
registration of candidates.
- Incorrect
assessment scheduling.
- Late
or inaccurate submission of results.
- Failure
to conduct required IQA.
- Failure
to cooperate with EQA.
- Failure
to apply reasonable adjustment procedures correctly.
- Failure
to manage complaints or appeals properly.
- Failure
to protect assessment materials.
- Failure
to retain assessment evidence.
- Incorrect
certificate data.
- Incorrect
registry entry.
- Failure
to report significant changes.
- Failure
to implement corrective actions.
- Poor
communication that affects candidate rights or assessment fairness.
- Use of
outdated forms, policies, assessment versions, or certificate templates.
12. Prevention
Measures
ATU-CPAC, providers, and assessment centers shall take
reasonable steps to prevent malpractice and maladministration.
Prevention measures may include:
- Clear
candidate instructions.
- Clear
provider guidance.
- Trainer,
assessor, IQA, and EQA approval controls.
- Trainer
certification by the Arab Trainers Union where required.
- Secure
assessment materials.
- Identity
verification.
- Controlled
examination administration.
- Academic
integrity declarations.
- AI-use
declarations where applicable.
- Plagiarism
or similarity checks where applicable.
- Internal
quality assurance.
- External
quality assurance.
- Standardization
meetings.
- Registry
and certificate data checks.
- Public
claims monitoring.
- Confidentiality
declarations.
- Conflict-of-interest
declarations.
- Corrective
action monitoring.
- Staff
training and awareness.
13. Reporting
Malpractice or Maladministration
Any person may report suspected malpractice or
maladministration to ATU-CPAC or to the relevant provider where appropriate.
Reports should include:
- Name
and contact details where possible.
- Person
or organization involved.
- Description
of the concern.
- Program,
assessment, certificate, or provider affected.
- Date
and location where known.
- Evidence
or supporting documents.
- Candidate
or certificate number where applicable.
- Immediate
risk or impact.
- Any
previous action taken.
Anonymous reports may be reviewed
where sufficient evidence is provided or where the matter involves serious risk
to certificate integrity, public trust, assessment security, data protection,
or ATU reputation.
14. Immediate
Protective Action
ATU-CPAC may take immediate protective action where there is
urgent risk.
Immediate protective action may include:
- Certificate
hold.
- Temporary
suspension of assessment activity.
- Temporary
suspension of provider scope.
- Registry
status changed to “under review.”
- Restriction
on public claims.
- Restriction
on use of ATU or ATU-CPAC marks.
- Preservation
of assessment evidence.
- Requirement
to stop using specific assessment materials.
- Requirement
to notify affected candidates or learners.
- Referral
to ATU leadership.
Immediate action shall be documented and reviewed by the
competent authority as soon as practical.
15. Investigation
Process
The normal investigation process includes:
- Concern
received.
- Initial
risk review completed.
- Evidence
secured.
- Conflict-of-interest
check completed.
- Investigator
or review panel appointed.
- Affected
party notified where appropriate.
- Response
requested where appropriate.
- Evidence
reviewed.
- Interviews
conducted where required.
- Findings
documented.
- Recommendation
prepared.
- Decision
made by competent authority.
- Outcome
communicated.
- Registry
or certificate status updated where required.
- Corrective
action or sanction applied where required.
- Appeal
rights communicated.
- Case
closed and improvement actions recorded.
Investigations shall be conducted fairly, confidentially,
and proportionately.
16. Evidence Used in
Investigations
Evidence may include:
- Candidate
submissions.
- Examination
records.
- Assessment
results.
- Marking
records.
- IQA
and EQA records.
- Attendance
records.
- Learning
platform logs.
- Proctoring
records.
- Emails
and official correspondence.
- Registry
records.
- Certificate
records.
- Website
or social media screenshots.
- Witness
statements.
- Provider
records.
- Partner
reports.
- Digital
metadata where available.
- Complaint
or appeal records.
- Previous
nonconformity or corrective action records.
Evidence shall be stored securely and accessed only by
authorized persons.
17. Possible
Outcomes
Investigation outcomes may include:
- No
malpractice or maladministration found.
- Concern
not upheld due to insufficient evidence.
- Maladministration
confirmed.
- Malpractice
confirmed.
- Partial
finding confirmed.
- Corrective
action required.
- Additional
monitoring required.
- Assessment
result amended.
- Reassessment
required.
- Result
cancelled.
- Certificate
hold applied or continued.
- Certificate
issued, corrected, withdrawn, or revoked.
- Provider
scope limited.
- Provider
suspended, withdrawn, or revoked.
- Assessor,
IQA, EQA, trainer, or reviewer approval suspended or withdrawn.
- Registry
status updated.
- Public
claims correction required.
- Referral
to ATU leadership, partner body, or legal authority where required.
18. Sanctions and
Corrective Actions
Where malpractice or maladministration is confirmed,
ATU-CPAC may apply one or more actions.
Possible actions include:
- Advice
or guidance.
- Formal
warning.
- Mandatory
training or standardization.
- Corrective
action plan.
- Increased
IQA or EQA monitoring.
- Requirement
to resubmit evidence.
- Reassessment.
- Result
cancellation.
- Certificate
hold.
- Certificate
correction.
- Certificate
withdrawal.
- Certificate
revocation.
- Limitation
of provider scope.
- Suspension
of provider, program, assessment center, trainer, assessor, IQA, or EQA
approval.
- Withdrawal
or revocation of approval or accreditation.
- Registry
status update.
- Public
correction or clarification.
- Partner
notification.
- Referral
to ATU leadership.
- Legal
action where required.
Sanctions shall be proportionate to the seriousness, intent,
evidence, recurrence, impact, and risk.
19. Candidate and
Learner Protection
Where malpractice or maladministration affects candidates or
learners, ATU-CPAC may require protection measures.
Protection measures may include:
- Review
of affected candidate records.
- Reassessment
opportunity where appropriate.
- Transfer
to another approved provider where possible.
- Certificate
hold until evidence is verified.
- Correction
of inaccurate results or records.
- Communication
with affected candidates.
- Protection
of valid candidate evidence.
- Provider
corrective action.
- Additional
IQA or EQA sampling.
- Registry
correction where required.
Candidate and learner protection shall not override
assessment integrity or certification requirements.
20. Appeals
A person or organization affected by a malpractice or
maladministration decision may appeal according to the ATU-CPAC Complaints and
Appeals Policy.
Appeals should be submitted within 15 days from notification
of the decision unless another approved procedure applies.
Appeals may be based on:
- Procedure
was not followed.
- Decision
was not supported by evidence.
- New
relevant evidence is available.
- Conflict
of interest affected the decision.
- Sanction
was disproportionate.
- Administrative
error occurred.
- Decision
was inconsistent with ATU-CPAC standards or policy.
Appeals shall be reviewed impartially by persons not
involved in the original decision.
21. Responsibilities
of ATU-CPAC
ATU-CPAC shall:
- Maintain
this policy and related procedures.
- Receive
and record malpractice and maladministration reports.
- Conduct
or oversee investigations.
- Protect
confidentiality and evidence.
- Ensure
impartiality and conflict-of-interest controls.
- Make
evidence-based decisions.
- Apply
proportionate sanctions and corrective actions.
- Update
registry and certificate status where required.
- Monitor
provider and assessment risks.
- Escalate
serious matters to ATU leadership.
- Use
findings for continuous improvement.
22. Responsibilities
of Providers and Assessment Centers
Providers and assessment centers shall:
- Maintain
malpractice and maladministration procedures.
- Inform
candidates and staff of malpractice rules.
- Protect
assessment materials and candidate evidence.
- Prevent
cheating, plagiarism, impersonation, collusion, and unauthorized
assistance.
- Report
suspected malpractice or maladministration promptly.
- Preserve
evidence.
- Cooperate
with ATU-CPAC investigations.
- Implement
corrective actions.
- Maintain
accurate records.
- Protect
candidate and learner rights.
- Ensure
trainers are certified by the Arab Trainers Union where required.
- Prevent
unauthorized public claims and certificate activity.
23. Responsibilities
of Trainers, Assessors, IQAs, and EQAs
Trainers, assessors, internal quality assurers, and external
quality assurers shall:
- Follow
approved policies and procedures.
- Maintain
confidentiality.
- Declare
conflicts of interest.
- Protect
assessment integrity.
- Report
suspected malpractice or maladministration.
- Cooperate
with investigation.
- Preserve
records and evidence.
- Avoid
improper assistance to candidates.
- Apply
assessment and quality assurance criteria fairly.
- Implement
corrective action where required.
24. Responsibilities
of Candidates and Learners
Candidates and learners shall:
- Submit
authentic work and evidence.
- Follow
assessment instructions.
- Avoid
cheating, plagiarism, impersonation, collusion, and falsification.
- Declare
use of artificial intelligence tools where required.
- Protect
confidential assessment materials.
- Report
suspected malpractice in good faith.
- Cooperate
with investigations where required.
- Use
certificates, badges, titles, and registry status honestly.
25. Responsibilities
of Partners
Partners shall:
- Report
suspected malpractice or maladministration affecting joint or endorsed
activities.
- Cooperate
with ATU-CPAC investigations.
- Protect
shared records and assessment materials.
- Avoid
unauthorized certificate or public claims.
- Implement
corrective action where required.
- Comply
with partner agreement requirements.
- Notify
ATU-CPAC of serious risks affecting credibility or public trust.
26. Records
Management
ATU-CPAC shall maintain secure records of malpractice and
maladministration cases.
Records may include:
- Report
or allegation.
- Initial
risk review.
- Evidence
collected.
- Conflict-of-interest
declarations.
- Investigation
plan.
- Interview
records.
- Investigation
report.
- Decision
record.
- Outcome
letter.
- Corrective
action plan.
- Sanction
record.
- Appeal
record.
- Registry
update.
- Certificate
action record.
- Partner
notification.
- Closure
record.
Records shall be retained according to ATU policy, ATU-CPAC
requirements, applicable laws, and partner requirements where applicable.
27. Confidentiality
and Data Protection
Malpractice and maladministration records shall be
confidential.
Information shall be shared only with persons authorized to
investigate, review, decide, implement action, or meet legal or partner
obligations.
Public communication shall not disclose confidential
personal, assessment, complaint, appeal, or investigation information unless
legally required or formally approved.
28. Continuous
Improvement
ATU-CPAC shall analyze malpractice and maladministration
trends to improve:
- Assessment
design.
- Candidate
instructions.
- Provider
guidance.
- Trainer
and assessor approval.
- IQA
and EQA requirements.
- Examination
security.
- Registry
and certificate controls.
- Public
claims monitoring.
- Data
protection.
- Partner
compliance.
- Complaints
and appeals handling.
- Risk
management.
Recurring findings shall be reported to the appropriate
ATU-CPAC committee and may lead to standards, policy, procedure, or training
updates.
29. Review of Policy
This policy shall be reviewed every three years or earlier
where required due to:
- ATU
Board decision.
- Legal
or regulatory change.
- ATU-CPAC
standards update.
- Malpractice
or maladministration trends.
- Assessment
security incidents.
- Registry
or certificate misuse cases.
- Complaints
or appeals trends.
- Partner
requirements.
- Data
protection concerns.
- Stakeholder
feedback.
- Operational
need.
30. Definitions
|
Term |
Meaning |
|
Arab Trainers
Union |
The issuing
authority for ATU certificates, professional certifications, accreditation
certificates, and related credentials. |
|
ATU-CPAC |
Arab Trainers
Union Council for Professional Accreditation and Certification, a specialized
council within ATU responsible for regulation, quality assurance, monitoring,
registry, and verification. |
|
Malpractice |
Improper,
dishonest, unethical, or unauthorized conduct that threatens the integrity of
accreditation, certification, assessment, registry, or certificate issuance. |
|
Maladministration |
Poor
administration or failure to follow approved procedures, which may affect
fairness, accuracy, quality, or compliance. |
|
Candidate |
A person
undertaking assessment for a certificate, professional certification, or
assessed program. |
|
Provider |
An
organization approved or accredited to deliver ATU-CPAC-governed training,
assessment, or professional programs. |
|
Assessor |
A qualified
and approved person who judges candidate evidence against approved criteria. |
|
IQA |
Internal
Quality Assurance, the provider-level review of assessment practice and
assessment decisions. |
|
EQA |
External
Quality Assurance, the independent review of provider assessment and IQA
practice by ATU-CPAC or appointed reviewers. |
|
Certificate
Hold |
Temporary
restriction preventing certificate issuance until concerns are resolved. |
|
Corrective
Action |
Action taken
to correct a problem and prevent recurrence. |
|
Sanction |
A formal
action taken in response to confirmed malpractice, maladministration, or
non-compliance. |
|
Registry |
The official
record used to verify provider, program, certificate, certification, or
professional status. |
Final Policy
Statement
ATU-CPAC Malpractice and Maladministration Policy exists to
protect the integrity, fairness, reliability, and public trust of credentials
issued under the authority of the Arab Trainers Union.
Through prevention, clear reporting, impartial
investigation, proportionate sanctions, candidate protection, registry control,
and continuous improvement, ATU-CPAC ensures that accreditation, certification,
assessment, and verification activities remain credible and professionally
trusted across Arab countries.



