Check-In with CPCAB: Issuing of Qualifications (starts at 15.50 mins)
Rory talks to Heather Price (Senior Counselling Professional) at CPCAB (Counselling & Psychotherapy Central Awarding Body) about how qualifications are issued.
As a student of counselling and psychotherapy, your contract is with your centre (i.e. your training provider, such as a college).
Meanwhile, your centre has a contract with the awarding body (e.g. CPCAB) – though universities are able to act as their own awarding bodies. Thus, if you have any questions about your qualification, it should be your college rather than CPCAB that you approach.
To gain your counselling qualification, it is necessary to satisfactorily complete both your internal and external assessments.
The internal assessment takes the form of a portfolio of work, while the external assessment for CPCAB is an exam.
Once you have passed both elements of the assessment, CPCAB will then issue your certificate, which it sends to your course provider to pass on to you.
Rory and Heather discuss what happens if a student has not completed all their work by the end of the course. This is more likely to happen at level 4 and beyond than it is at levels 2 and 3, since the practitioner levels require the completion of placement hours.
Tutors can contact CPCAB to request extensions on behalf of students, but only when there are genuine extenuating circumstances. Extensions are time-limited.
As a student, you have a responsibility to try your best to keep on top of your work – and to communicate at an early stage with your tutor if this becomes impossible.
You can find more information about CPCAB on its website. CPCAB is the UK’s only awarding body run by counsellors for counsellors.