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Elements and Performance Criteria

  1. Respond to emergency
  2. Launch survival craft and rescue boats
  3. Operate survival craft and rescue boats
  4. Operate lifesaving and survival equipment on board survival craft and rescue boats
  5. Assume responsibility for survival of crew and passengers

Required Skills

Required Skills

Board a survival craft from the ship and water while wearing a life jacket

Determine the type and extent of the emergency

Don a life jacket

Don and use an immersion suit

Free a survival craft of obstructions

Identify hypothermia and provide appropriate treatment

Keep afloat without a life jacket

Launch survival craft

Operate location devices including radio equipment

Operate radio equipment

Operate survival craft equipment

Recognise and interpret muster signals

Right an inverted life raft

Right an inverted life raft while wearing a life jacket

Safely jump from a height into water

Stream a drogue or seaanchor

Swim while wearing a life jacket

Take initial actions on boarding survival craft to enhance chance of survival

Required Knowledge

Action to be taken in an emergency

Characteristics of survival craft

Emergency muster and abandon vessel signals

Equipment found in survival craft its function and the procedures for correct operation

Equipment in survival craft

First aid techniques

Location of personal lifesaving appliances

Location of survival equipment on vessel

Principles concerning survival including

value of training and drills

personal protective clothing and equipment

need to be ready for any emergency

actions to be taken when called to survival craft stations

actions to be taken when required to abandon ship

actions to be taken when in the water

actions to be taken when aboard a survival craft

main dangers to survivors

Procedures for abandoning vessel

Relevant maritime regulations related to required survival equipment on a vessel

Relevant work health and safety WHSoccupational health and safety OHS legislation and policies

Standard safety symbols

Steps to be taken after collision grounding or other marine casualty and resulting hull damage

Survival at sea techniques

Techniques for using survival equipment

Time required to make distress calls safely

Types of emergency situations which may occur such as collision fire foundering

Types of lifesaving appliances normally carried on ships

Use of distress signals and penalty for misuse

Evidence Required

The evidence guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the performance criteria the required skills and knowledge the range statement and the Assessment Guidelines for the Training Package

Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit

The evidence required to demonstrate competence in this unit must be relevant to and satisfy all of the requirements of the Elements Performance Criteria Required Skills Required Knowledge and include

identifying muster signals and taking action that is appropriate to emergency and complies with established procedures

timing and sequencing individual actions so they are appropriate to prevailing circumstance and conditions and minimise potential dangers and threats to survival

using method of boarding survival craft that is appropriate and avoids dangers to other survivors

ensuring initial actions after leaving ship and procedures and actions in the water minimise threats to survival

Context of and specific resources for assessment

Performance is demonstrated consistently over time and in a suitable range of contexts

Resources for assessment include access to

industryapproved marine operations site where surviving at sea in the event of vessel abandonment can be conducted

tools equipment and personal protective equipment currently used in industry

relevant regulatory and equipment documentation that impacts on work activities

range of relevant exercises case studies andor other simulated practical and knowledge assessments

appropriate range of relevant operational situations in the workplace

In both real and simulated environments access is required to

relevant and appropriate materials and equipment

applicable documentation including workplace procedures regulations codes of practice and operation manuals

Method of assessment

Practical assessment must occur in an

appropriately simulated workplace environment andor

appropriate range of situations in the workplace

A range of assessment methods should be used to assess practical skills and knowledge The following examples are appropriate to this unit

direct observation of the candidate surviving at sea in the event of vessel abandonment

direct observation of the candidate applying relevant WHSOHS requirements and work practices

Guidance information for assessment

Holistic assessment with other units relevant to the industry sector workplace and job role is recommended

In all cases where practical assessment is used it should be combined with targeted questioning to assess Required Knowledge

Assessment processes and techniques must be appropriate to the language and literacy requirements of the work being performed and the capacity of the candidate


Range Statement

The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below.

Emergency situations must include:

Collision

Fire

Foundering

Radio equipment may include:

EPIRB

Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS)

HF

Search and Rescue Transponders (SARTs)

VHF

Survival craft and rescue boats may include:

Inflatable life raft

Life boat

Rescue boat

Lifesaving and survival equipment may include:

EPIRBs

Flares

Life jackets

Immersion suit

Person overboard combination light and smoke float

SARTs