Opinion: CIPD Qualification is in massive need of modernisation

Hey all,

I am a level 7 CIPD student, with two units left before I complete my course in July. I am currently employed as a HR Director in a small business (65~ employees), prior to this I worked at very large companies as a "People Professional" in some form, albeit more of an Operations position than an HR position.

Throughout the past 2-3 years of part-time studying, I have had this growing stance on the entire qualification:

The CIPD qualification produces great HR essay writers, not great HR professionals.

Why is there absolutely zero practical work for any of the qualification? It would be so much more enriching and effective it included:

  • Roleplays for very challenging disciplinaries
  • Mini assignment to plan, manage and roleplay redundancies within an organistion end-to-end
  • Tests to create a new organisational chart for a mock company
  • Having to write mock letters responding to a tribunal claim process, to develop technical writing.
  • Create a new reward structure for a mock company
  • Develop and present a company first People Strategy/Plan

There's so much opportunity to real and practical development. Instead every unit feels the same:

  1. Be assigned unit
  2. Buy prescribed book(s)
  3. Read prescried book(s)
  4. Write a 4000 word essay

I met someone on my course who has received a merit for an essay on the topic of redundancy, but has never actual conducted a redundancy meeting of any kind in their career. This is a bit like me saying I can drive because I passed the theory test but failed the practical.

Does anyone else feel this way? Considering how much stuff I see from the CIPD promoting the use of new technology, staying modern and ahead of the curve etc. the actual qualification seems remarkably old school.

Parents
  • A (very) long time since I did my IPD qualifications (the C came later), What baffled me at the time (and hopefully has been addressed since) was the complete lack of employment law studied. While legislation was referenced I'm sure in each section, the proper framework of legal rights for employees was never covered. I know that it was when I did my law qualifications, many years after I started working in HR, that I properly understood contract law. I dread to think how many contracts I dealt with before then ...
Reply
  • A (very) long time since I did my IPD qualifications (the C came later), What baffled me at the time (and hopefully has been addressed since) was the complete lack of employment law studied. While legislation was referenced I'm sure in each section, the proper framework of legal rights for employees was never covered. I know that it was when I did my law qualifications, many years after I started working in HR, that I properly understood contract law. I dread to think how many contracts I dealt with before then ...
Children
  • I also did my IPM (!) post-grad diploma well over 30 years ago, though I did do a module on employment law; having said that, we were in the throes of the Thatcher union reform legislation, and SSP and SMP had only been introduced a few years before...... it does feel as if the qualifications have become much more academic. Indeed, when I started working in "personnel", there were no HR first or post-grad degrees, only part-time PG diplomas. However, there is nothing that can prepare you for actually undertaking a disciplinary investigation (my first was a night shift on a chemical plant investigating gross misconduct); speaking with very distressed staff who are at risk of redundancy, etc. even if we are armed with the best research about team working, leadership, behavioural tendencies etc. That's not to say there isn't a place for academic study, undertanding unerlying themes and principles, and undertaking research toenhance our knowledge; but there is a whole lot of difference between an excellent understanding of the academic principles and the practical application to stressed, emotional individuals. Not sure I've cracked that yet.....
  • When I did mine (2003 - 5) it was an optional unit for the PG Dip...