RPL can be a powerful process to assist student career planning. It can help learners understand where their strengths, weaknesses and interests lie, particularly if the process has included direct interaction with workplace supervisors and mentors. This can help them map not only appropriate careers but also appropriate pathways for attaining their goals.
RPL can have a significant impact on learner confidence and motivation. Through the RPL process, learners can come to realise how much they already know and can do, and thus may try a qualification or training program that they otherwise might not have attempted, or at least would have approached with trepidation.
RPL can significantly assist in the development of learner-centred training programmes. It can provide information and insights regarding what learners already know and how each learner learns best, which allows trainers to tailor the teaching–learning process to match learning styles.
Considerable concern is expressed about the significant and obvious difference in standards among training providers when the national training agenda mandates the acceptance of assessments by all other registered training providers. This is not seen to be a major concern when the learner is only seeking RPL for a small percentage of a training programme because providers generally believe they can ‘compensate for deficiencies before graduation’. It is, however, seen to be a major problem when the learner is seeking a significant amount of recognition towards a qualification that will carry the name of the new provider.
The ‘shelf-life’ of qualifications and experience used for the purpose of RPL, particularly in some industry areas, requires consideration. The interviewees expressed concern that the rate, pervasiveness and depth of change in some industry areas - for example, sound, video and information technology - are such that even quite recently acquired qualifications and experiences may no longer reflect accepted industry practice or standards.
RPL can provide significant assistance to employers regarding the potential contribution of the learner to the business. It is seen as a very effective way of assisting senior staff of the business to understand the existing knowledge, skills and experience of the learner (their employee) so that, in turn, the business can make maximum productive use of the employee.
After two extensive RPL projects (one with the SERVICES SETA, which totalled approximately 15 000 learners being RPL'd for placement onto learnerships over an eighteen-month period and the others under the National Skills Fund/Domestic Worker Chamber which included over 1000 Domestic Workers), a number of valuable lessons were learnt regarding practical RPL implementation in the workplace. Key lessons included: