Course delivery: The course runs over a full academic year ( September to June) following school terms as much as possible. A full timetable will be available in Spring 2025.
A variety of delivery methods are tailored to meet the needs of learners and the requirements of the syllabus.
- Weekly sessions of practical tuition will allow students to concentrate on becoming proficient in various horticultural tasks.
- An online classroom will give access to videos which demonstrate the tasks you will cover, to give you a chance to return to topics for your own practice (and in case you miss a session).
- Course notes for each topic are downloadable from the online classroom (or available in printed form to purchase separately); these provide the background information for each part of the syllabus which is tested in the OCA (online competence assessment).
- Self-test quizzes in the online classroom will help you check your knowledge.
- Narrated presentations in the online classroom cover the key points for each practical topic. These will be in a downloadable format and with the course notes are an essential part of the course to complement the practical sessions.
- Plant identification will be supported by an online gallery of plant pictures, with self-test quizzes to help you to learn botanical names.
- Once a month there will be a plant identification test from live specimens .
Studying in this way this will virtually double the course time, so you need to be able to commit to a regular 3 hours of home study each week . We will ensure that you are adequately prepared for all assessments and can look forward to successfully achieving your qualification.
Assessment: The new RHS Certificate will be assessed by two types of examination*:
- Two Practical Competence Assessments will cover various core tasks from the syllabus; these will be undertaken at the centre in spring and summer and assessed by an external RHS examiner and a Centre assessor. The Assessments are marked according to method and proficiency; the pass mark is 50%, and this element (both assessments combined) provides 80% of the full assessment.
- A 75 minute online test taken at the end of the course ( the online test is designed to be taken at home, but it will be on a specific date/time decided by the RHS, and taken in line with their exam procedures). The test will consist of some multiple choice questions and some short answer questions, based on 'real world scenarios' of horticultural situations; it is designed to test the application of practical knowledge rather than underpinning theory. The pass mark is 50% and this provides 20% of the assessment.
Final marks will only be awarded when both parts of the Assessment have been undertaken, but the Qualification can now be graded as Pass, Merit or Distinction depending on proficiency and knowledge.
There is a Rehearsal Day built into the timetable before each Practical Competence assessment to give learners experience of working under time constraints and with an external assessor, who will give feedback on the tasks undertaken.
*If you are not comfortable with an examination-based course, you may like to look at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Practical Certificate in Horticulture, which is a practical and centre - assessed course.