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TERMS AND CONDITIONS
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The journals serve numerous purposes:
Your apprenticeship is a journey, your journal tracks your journey and development. Eight to Twelve months in to your programme your skill set will be different and you will have enhanced responsibilities and certifications than you will have had on day one. Your journal is a central repository for some of your evidence, if you add in what you have done and learned at work with screen captures and documents, it’s easier to look and go back in time to pull this information out from one place to use in your project write ups. Because you'll have a narrative and evidence there already, it will save you time going back through emails, tickets and code from months prior when you come to write up your project.
You can use this journal to see how far and how well you have done so far, and also remind yourself what you have learned, this is useful as you could use this content to enhance your CV and potentially negotiate a pay rise with your manager in your annual performance review.
Additionally as part of the apprenticeship, you need to show evidence of your continual learning and progression and this is mandatory part of the apprenticeship. This is to satisfy the Education and Skills Funding Agency (ESFA) eligibility criteria for funding and that:
You'll need to account for and evidence 20% (minimum) “off job training”. The journal and timesheets are a perfect and simple for you to log this time.
Journals need to be populated weekly and timely in the current month of learning.
Common problems with journals are that the entries are brief, and show what was done at work, as opposed to what was learned. What was “done” doesn’t show anyone reading what you have “learned”. Some terminology changes and the addition of some finer details would make this an easy task.
“Today I edited some images for a customer website”
“Today I learned how to take a stock image and crop it to the customers correct size for a customer website. I had to use Photoshop’s cropping tool to get the resolution to the correct size. This is going to be a useful skill as I will be able to take any give image and be able to amend it straight away without waiting for someone to help me. I had to use image dimensions and calculations in the tool to get the image to be the right size. First, I had to spend 30 minutes researching several websites on how to do it. ”
Example 2 shows explicit learning, a better idea of what you did, and also provides evidence of use of Maths in the workplace and some evidence that you can refer back to later on. The text in bold is evidence of Off The Job training.
In Example 2, the individual has met the following:
Your Learning Mentor would want one of these entries every day, or a substantial amount to cover a week period. You do not have to evidence learning, Off-The Job learning etc. in every daily entry, just within that week period and current month of learning.
Firebrand Training grants you a personal, non-exclusive, non-transferable license to access and use the site. You may download or print material from the site only for your own personal, non-commercial use. Read our full terms and conditions on https://firebrand.training/se/learn/terms-and-conditions.