Course Overview
HiQual UK delivers the Level 3 Certificate in Disaster & Emergency Management, designed for learners entering emergency response, humanitarian operations, public safety, and community resilience roles. The qualification builds competence in preparedness, coordination, communication, and compliance with national and international emergency frameworks. Learners develop the skills required to support emergency operations across government, NGOs, healthcare, and security sectors, producing audit‑ready documentation for regulated environments.
Qualification Details
| Qualification Title | Level 3 Certificate in Disaster & Emergency Management |
|---|---|
| Total Credits | 32 |
| Guided Learning Hours | 64 |
| Qualification Time | 128 |
Information coming shortly.
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Introduction to Disaster & Emergency Management: Concepts, disaster types, global frameworks, and response models.
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Risk Assessment & Hazard Identification: Threat analysis, vulnerability mapping, and community impact evaluation.
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Emergency Planning & Preparedness: Response plans, resource allocation, and coordination structures.
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Incident Command Systems (ICS): Roles, communication protocols, and multi‑agency coordination.
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Crisis Communication & Public Information: Alerts, media handling, and stakeholder messaging.
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Humanitarian Response & Relief Operations: Shelter, logistics, NGO coordination, and ethical considerations.
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Health, Safety & Infection Control in Emergencies: PPE, hygiene, outbreak response, and safety protocols.
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Evacuation, Search & Rescue Fundamentals: Procedures, safety, and responder coordination.
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Legislation, Ethics & Compliance: National policies, international standards, and duty of care.
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Practical Assessments & Portfolio Development: Scenario‑based exercises, case studies, and documentation.
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Competence in disaster preparedness and emergency coordination
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Strengthened communication, planning, and risk assessment skills
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Compliance with national and international emergency standards
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Audit‑ready documentation and scenario‑based training
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Career progression in emergency services, NGOs, and public safety
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Emergency response volunteers
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Community safety officers
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NGO and humanitarian support staff
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Learners progressing from Level 2 safety or community service awards
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Assessment type: Practical simulations + written exam + portfolio review
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Format: Scenario‑based tasks, MCQs, case studies, oral defense
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Total questions: 50 theory + multiple practical tasks
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Passing score: 70%
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Duration: 16–20 weeks (240–280 hours)
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Certification: Level 3 Certificate in Disaster & Emergency Management (DSEM‑313)
To deliver this Qualification, HiQual UK Approved ATPs must demonstrate the capability to deliver, assess, and internally quality assure qualifications in line with recognised regulatory principles and the expectations of the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF).
Approved centres must operate effective systems to ensure the validity, reliability, fairness, consistency, and security of assessment.
1. Centre Recognition and Legal Compliance
Centres must be formally recognised by HiQual UK prior to the delivery or assessment of any
qualification. To maintain recognition, centres must:
Be a legally constituted organisation operating in compliance with applicable legislation and
regulatory
requirements.
Demonstrate effective governance, management oversight, and clear lines of accountability.
Comply with all HiQual UK policies, procedures, and conditions of centre recognition.
Notify HiQual UK promptly of any material changes that may affect delivery, assessment, or internal
quality assurance arrangements.
2. Resources, Facilities, and Learning Environment
Centres must ensure that sufficient and appropriate resources are in place to support learning and
assessment. This includes:
Learning environments appropriate to the mode of delivery, including classrooms and, where
applicable,
specialist or practical facilities.
Access to learning and assessment resources that enable learners to meet qualification outcomes.
Secure systems for managing learner data, assessment records, and certification claims.
Arrangements that support equality of access and reasonable adjustments for learners where required.
3. Staff Competence and Occupational Expertise
Centres must ensure that all staff involved in delivery, assessment, and internal quality assurance
are
competent and suitably qualified. Centres must:
Appoint tutors with appropriate subject knowledge, teaching competence, and relevant occupational or
professional experience.
Ensure assessors are trained and competent in applying HiQual UK assessment requirements and
standards.
Appoint a qualified Internal Quality Assurer (IQA) responsible for monitoring assessment practice
and
decisions.
Maintain records of staff qualifications, experience, training, and continuing professional
development
(CPD).
4. Assessment Practice and Internal Quality Assurance (IQA)
Centres must operate robust internal quality assurance systems to ensure assessment integrity.
Centres
must:
Ensure assessment is valid, fit for purpose, and conducted in line with HiQual UK requirements.
Implement effective IQA procedures to monitor assessor performance and confirm the consistency of
assessment decisions.
Maintain accurate, complete, and auditable records of learner registration, assessment evidence, and
outcomes.
Carry out regular internal reviews and standardisation activities to support continuous improvement.
5. Integrity, Risk Management, and Malpractice
Centres must take appropriate measures to protect the integrity of assessment. Centres must:
Maintain policies and procedures for the prevention, identification, and management of malpractice
and
maladministration.
Ensure secure handling, storage, and retention of assessment materials and learner evidence.
Report any suspected or confirmed malpractice to HiQual UK in accordance with published procedures.
6. Health, Safety, Safeguarding, and Learner Protection
Centres must provide a safe, inclusive, and supportive learning environment. Centres must:
Comply with applicable health and safety and safeguarding legislation.
Conduct risk assessments for learning activities, particularly where practical or technical work is
involved.
Maintain procedures to safeguard learner welfare and wellbeing.
7. Learner Information, Support, and Fair Treatment
Centres must ensure learners are informed, supported, and treated fairly. Centres must:
Provide clear and accurate information on programme requirements, assessment methods, and
certification.
Ensure learners receive timely and constructive feedback on assessment outcomes.
Operate transparent complaints and appeals procedures aligned with HiQual UK requirements.
Manage learner information securely in compliance with data protection legislation.
Information coming shortly.
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