Freelance CITB Tutor

January 12, 2018 | Comments Off on Freelance CITB Tutor

We are a CITB accredited centre looking for tutors to deliver CITB training courses on a freelance basis including the following:

Health and Safety Awareness (HSA) 1 day
Site Supervisor Safety Training Scheme (SSSTS) 2 day
Site Manager Safety Training Scheme (SMSTS) 5 day

The tutor will deliver in the following regions: London and the South East.

Responsibilities

Providing a positive learning experience for customers and reinforcing their knowledge of current health and safety legislation
Managing the classroom facilities in a tidy manner to ensure customers are provided with an environment in which they can benefit from the course
Keeping order on the customers during the course and monitoring any misconduct
Liaising with office staff to manage supplies and materials for the course and ensuring customers are supplied with the relevant course content
Monitoring and reporting any safeguarding issues to the safeguarding representative for further investigation

Requirements

The tutor must hold as a minimum one of the following:

Preparing to Teach Life Long Sector (PTLLS) Level 3.
Cskills Awards recognised exemption (CTLLS, DTLLS, PGCE, C&G 7302 or 7303 or 7307 or 7407, PCET, CPCS Instructor card, Certificate of Training Achievement Instructor card, L Unit 9 or 10 or 11 or 12)

The tutor must also hold one of the following:

NEBOSH National Certificate in Construction Safety and Health
NVQ/SVQ Level 4/5 in Occupational Health and Safety
Health and Safety degree
NEBOSH Diploma in Occupational Safety and Health Part 2/NEBOSH Units A, B, C and D
DipSM Level 6

A valid certificate in the course of delivery must be held; an SMSTS certificate will cover the HSA, SSSTS and SMSTS courses.

Tutors must also be able to provide evidence of on-site experience at management/supervisory level in the construction industry, displaying their knowledge in dealing with the type of conditions and practices that are reflected in the course content. Experience in project management must include practical input, such as decision making and problem solving. Safety inspections and audits are not suitable examples of work that satisfy this requirement.