Assessment Standards

Assessment Standards

Certifiedge assessment focuses on practical evidence, documentation quality, judgment, usefulness and readiness signals - not attendance alone.

Assessment philosophy

Certifiedge assessment should answer one question: what can this person demonstrate with evidence? Completion matters, but evidence quality matters more.

  • authentic tasks
  • visible artifacts
  • rubric-based review
  • revision allowed
  • assessor comments
  • employer-readable interpretation
  • honest readiness bands
  • privacy-aware evidence sharing

Evidence types

reportstrackerschecklistsworkflowscustomer responsesfinancial recordsfarm recordsdispatch logscompliance documentslesson plansAI prompt librariesquality-check logspresentation/video evidencereflective defensemission submissions

Assessment criteria

How evidence is reviewed.

Accuracy

How correct the submission is against stated task requirements and evidence references.

Completeness

Whether required outputs, files, notes and reflections are present and reviewable.

Practical usefulness

How usable the output is in real work situations for teams, clients or operations.

Documentation quality

Clarity of structure, labels, assumptions, versioning and evidence traceability.

Judgment and decision-making

Quality of choices, tradeoff awareness and ability to justify decisions.

Communication

Professional tone, audience fit, readability and response discipline.

Reliability and completion discipline

On-time delivery, consistency and ability to follow required process steps.

Revision after feedback

How well the learner improves weak evidence after assessor comments.

Ethics and confidentiality

Respect for privacy, attribution, consent and non-disclosure boundaries.

Responsible AI use

Disclosure, quality checks and safe handling where AI assistance is used.

Safety/compliance awareness

Risk awareness in regulated or sensitive tasks.

Employer-readiness relevance

How clearly the output supports role-readiness interpretation.

Review statuses

  • Not Submitted
  • Submitted
  • In Review
  • Revision Required
  • Accepted as Evidence
  • Strong Evidence
  • Verified
  • Rejected
  • Suspended / Under Review

Rejected does not always mean the learner cannot improve. It may mean evidence is currently too weak, incomplete, unverifiable or inappropriate.

Revision process

  1. Evidence submitted.
  2. Assessor identifies specific gap.
  3. Revision note is issued with practical corrections.
  4. Learner improves evidence.
  5. Learner resubmits with change notes.
  6. Assessor records final status.
  7. Proof Passport updates if accepted.

Revision is part of building proof. It protects credibility.

Rubric model

Sample rubric model with five scoring levels.
Criterion Insufficient Developing Acceptable Strong Advanced
Documentation Quality Evidence is unclear, incomplete or difficult to inspect. Evidence exists but has gaps, weak structure or unclear labels. Evidence is organized enough to review and understand. Evidence is clear, well-labelled, practical and useful. Evidence is professional, complete, contextualized and ready for employer or partner review.
Judgment Decisions are missing or unjustified. Some decisions are stated but rationale is weak. Rationale is understandable and context-aware. Decisions reflect risk awareness and practical tradeoffs. Decisions are deeply reasoned with strong risk and quality logic.
Practical Usefulness Output cannot be used in realistic workflow. Output is partially usable but needs heavy rework. Output is usable with moderate support. Output is useful in real operations with minor edits. Output is deployment-ready and aligned to professional standards.

Reality Lab assessment

Labs are assessed for execution under constraints, evidence quality, judgment, communication and time discipline.

Employer Mission assessment

Missions are reviewed for practical usefulness, role relevance, documentation quality and supervision-readiness.

Royalty review standards

Royalty requires higher evidence thresholds, review rigor, reflective defense and verification discipline.

FAQ

Assessment standards at a glance.

Does completion automatically become verified evidence?

No. Evidence is accepted only after quality review against rubric criteria.

Can rejected evidence be improved?

Often yes. Revision may be allowed where the learner can address defined gaps.

Are labs and missions assessed differently?

They share core criteria, but role context and mission constraints also influence scoring.

Does a strong score guarantee employment?

No. Scores are evidence signals, not job guarantees.

Integrity and originality

Certifiedge may require originality checks, AI-use disclosure and source clarity before evidence is accepted for verified status.

Certifiedge policies should be reviewed by qualified legal and data protection professionals before formal launch, especially where learner data, employer access, payments, minors, research participation or cross-border users are involved.