What is actually in a complete training and assessment pack?
A complete training and assessment pack for one unit of competency contains a learner guide, learner activities, assessment tools, marking guides and benchmarks, a mapping matrix, a trainer guide, a session plan and presentation slides — usually with LMS-ready files. The point is not the count of documents. It is that they are written as one connected set, so every piece answers to the same unit outcomes.
"Resources" is a slippery word in the VET sector. It can mean a single PowerPoint, or it can mean everything a trainer and assessor need to deliver and defend a unit from day one. When you are scoping what to buy or build, that gap matters. Here is the full inventory of a genuinely complete pack, and what each part is for.
What documents are in a complete unit pack?
A complete pack covers the whole teaching and assessment cycle for one unit: something to learn from, something to practise with, something to be assessed against, the proof that assessment covers the unit, and the guidance a trainer needs to run it. In practice that is eight to ten connected documents.
| Document | What it does |
|---|---|
| Learner guide | The core teaching content — the knowledge a learner needs, in plain language, structured to the unit. |
| Learner workbook / activities | Formative practice. Low-stakes tasks that build skills before assessment. |
| Assessment tools | The summative instruments — knowledge questions, projects, case studies, role plays and observation tasks. |
| Marking guides & benchmarks | Model answers and observable criteria so two assessors reach the same decision. |
| Mapping matrix | The evidence trail tracing every unit requirement to where it is taught and assessed. |
| Trainer / assessor guide | How to deliver and assess — context, conditions, reasonable adjustment and rules of evidence. |
| Session / delivery plan | The running order: how the unit is paced across sessions. |
| Presentation slides | Classroom-ready slides aligned to the learner guide. |
What is a mapping matrix, and why does it matter most?
A mapping matrix traces every element, performance criterion, performance evidence, knowledge evidence and assessment condition in the unit to the exact place it is taught and the exact task that assesses it. It is the single document an auditor reaches for first, because it shows — at a glance — whether your assessment covers the whole unit with no gaps and no padding.
If the mapping is wrong, everything downstream is suspect. If a performance criterion is mapped to an assessment task that does not actually test it, you have a gap. If the matrix claims coverage the tools do not deliver, that is worse than no matrix at all. Good mapping is not paperwork after the fact — it is the spine the pack is built around.
Why fragments leave you exposed
When the pieces of a pack are bought separately or written at different times, they drift out of alignment. The assessment ends up testing something the learner guide never taught, the slides cover material the assessment ignores, or the mapping describes a version of the tools that no longer exists. A pack written as one connected set avoids this by design.
The catalogue model — buy a learner guide here, an assessment there — survives on volume, not coherence. It leaves the hardest job, joining everything up so it holds together, with you. And under the 2025 Standards for RTOs, that join is exactly what an auditor now expects to see working in practice.
- A complete pack spans the whole cycle: learn, practise, assess, prove, deliver.
- The mapping matrix is the most important document — it is your evidence trail.
- Documents written separately drift apart; a connected set stays aligned to the unit.
- Editable files matter: a pack you cannot adapt is never truly yours.
The test of a pack is simple. Could a trainer who has never seen the unit pick it up and run it on Monday — and could the assessor defend every decision the following week? If yes, it is complete. If the answer needs an asterisk, something is missing.
One unit. Every document it takes to deliver it.
Quillon scopes the unit with you, then writes the entire pack as one connected set — mapped to the training package and delivered as clean, editable files.
A complete unit pack typically includes a learner guide, a learner workbook or activities, assessment tools (knowledge questions, projects, case studies and observation tasks), marking guides and benchmarks, a mapping matrix, a trainer or assessor guide, a session or delivery plan, and presentation slides. LMS-ready files are often included so the pack can be uploaded directly.
A mapping matrix traces every element, performance criterion, performance evidence, knowledge evidence and assessment condition in a unit of competency to the exact place it is taught and assessed. It is the evidence trail that shows an auditor your assessment covers the whole unit, with no gaps and no padding.
When pieces are bought separately or written at different times, the learner guide, assessment and mapping can drift out of alignment. The assessment may test something the guide never taught, or the mapping may claim coverage the tools do not deliver. A pack written as one connected set keeps every document answering to the same outcomes.
Last updated 26 May 2026