Build a TAS That Justifies Duration, Delivery Mode and Learner Progression Under the 2025 Standards
90 minutes
Live Webinar
Integrated – Intermediate
$95.00
August 11, 2026
12:30 pm AEST
Javier Amaro Castillo
A TAS that simply describes delivery is no longer enough. Under the Standards for RTOs 2025, your RTO must be able to justify why the duration, mode, sequencing, resources and support arrangements are appropriate for the training product, learner cohort and delivery context.
When those decisions are not clearly documented, the TAS becomes an audit vulnerability. Weak rationale, inconsistent implementation and gaps between the TAS and actual delivery can expose your RTO to avoidable compliance risk.
This webinar helps you turn your TAS into a defensible operational control that supports Standard 1.1 compliance, strengthens audit evidence and improves consistency across delivery.
Why TAS Documents Fail in Audits
A TAS usually fails when it looks complete but cannot prove the logic behind the design. The issue is rarely whether a document exists. The real issue is whether the RTO can demonstrate that its training structure, duration, delivery mode and support arrangements are appropriate, implemented and monitored.
Common audit exposure appears when course durations are copied from old templates, learner cohort descriptions are generic, delivery modes are not justified, or schedules do not provide sufficient time for instruction, practice, feedback and assessment.
This creates a direct evidence gap. Trainers may deliver inconsistently. Students may progress through poorly sequenced learning. Assessment may occur before sufficient skill development. The RTO is then left defending a TAS that does not reflect operational reality.
Key risk points include:
Duration That Cannot Be Justified
Against AQF level, training product complexity or learner characteristics.
Delivery Modes Selected Without Evidence
That students can attain required skills and knowledge through that model.
Sequencing and Pacing Gaps
That weaken learner progression and assessment readiness.
Misalignment Between TAS, Schedules, Resources, Support and Assessment
Where planning documents do not clearly connect delivery structure to learner outcomes.
Inconsistent Implementation
Across trainers, cohorts, sites or online delivery models.
Under Standard 1.1, the TAS must do more than state intentions. It must support a defensible training design that can be evidenced in practice.
What This Webinar Will Help You Achieve
This webinar will help you move beyond TAS completion and build a stronger evidence base for the decisions sitting behind your training and assessment strategy.
You will be able to review whether your TAS explains and justifies duration, delivery mode, sequencing, pacing, learner support, resources, assessment timing and implementation controls.
This will enable your RTO to strengthen Standard 1.1 evidence, reduce audit exposure and improve consistency between what the TAS promises and what is actually delivered.
You will be able to:
- justify training duration and volume of learning using a structured decision process
- align delivery mode decisions with learner cohort needs and training product requirements
- identify evidence gaps before they become audit findings
- connect TAS content to delivery schedules, trainer allocation, resources and support arrangements
- improve consistency across trainers, cohorts and delivery sites
- document TAS decisions in a way that supports self-assurance and audit defensibility
The focus is practical and operational: how to design, document and defend the TAS as a quality control mechanism, not a static compliance file.
What You Will Take Back to Your RTO
You will leave with practical tools and decision models that can be applied immediately to review existing TAS documents or strengthen new ones before they are implemented.
The focus is not on adding more wording to a template. The focus is on improving the quality of the evidence, rationale and operational alignment behind each TAS decision.
You will take back:
TAS Audit-risk Review Checklist
To identify unsupported claims, weak rationale and missing evidence.
Duration and Volume of Learning Justification Model
To help explain why the allocated time is appropriate for the cohort and training product.
Delivery Mode Decision Guide
To test whether classroom, online, workplace or blended delivery enables students to attain required skills and knowledge.
Learner Cohort Analysis Prompt Sheet
To link student characteristics, entry points, LLN, digital capability and support needs to training design.
Sequencing and Pacing Review Tool
To check whether training allows sufficient time for instruction, practice, feedback and assessment.
TAS-to-schedule Alignment Check
To compare documented strategy against actual delivery timetables.
Standard 1.1 Evidence Map
To organise the documents, records and implementation evidence your RTO may need during audit or performance assessment.
Worked Examples
Weak TAS wording converted into stronger, defensible design rationale.
These resources will help your RTO shift from “we have a TAS” to “we can prove how our TAS supports compliant, consistent and effective training delivery.”
Who This Webinar Is For
This session is most relevant for RTO Managers, CEOs, Training Managers, Compliance Managers and Instructional Designers who need stronger control over TAS quality, audit evidence and delivery consistency.
For senior leaders, the value is governance and risk visibility. For compliance teams, it is stronger evidence defensibility. For training manag
Secondary Audience
This session will also support Trainers and Assessors, Quality Assurance staff, Student Support personnel and Resource Developers who contribute to course planning, cohort support, delivery implementation or TAS review.
Their participation will strengthen shared understanding and reduce the risk of localised interpretation, inconsistent delivery and undocumented changes.
How the Session Is Delivered
This is a practical, structured webinar designed to support implementation. The session focuses on the decisions RTOs need to make, the evidence they need to keep and the controls they need to apply to make TAS documents defensible.
The session uses real-world TAS risk points, worked examples and practical tools to help participants identify what needs to be improved in their own RTO context.
The webinar includes:
- live facilitation by an experienced VET compliance practitioner
- examples of common TAS weaknesses and stronger evidence-based alternatives
- practical guidance on duration, delivery mode, sequencing, learner cohort analysis and support alignment
- templates, checklists and review prompts that can be adapted to your RTO
- Q&A focused on implementation, audit readiness and defensible decision-making
Bring one current TAS to the session. You will be able to assess it against the concepts, tools and risk indicators discussed.
Implementation Model: Learning → Application → Impact
This webinar is designed to support transfer into practice. The objective is to help your RTO convert Standard 1.1 expectations into stronger TAS decisions, clearer implementation controls and better audit evidence.
Learning
You will be able to interpret what Standard 1.1 requires from TAS design decisions, including duration, delivery mode, sequencing, pacing, learner progression and evidence of suitability.
Application
Within 30–90 days, your RTO can review priority TAS documents, close evidence gaps, strengthen weak rationale and improve alignment between TAS, schedules, resources, learner support and assessment timing.
Impact
Your RTO will be better positioned to demonstrate consistent delivery implementation, reduce audit exposure and provide stronger evidence that training enables students to attain the skills and knowledge required by the training product.
Why This Matters Under the 2025 Standards
The Standards for RTOs 2025 place greater emphasis on outcomes, implementation and evidence. RTOs must demonstrate that training is not only planned, but structured and delivered in a way that enables students to progress and achieve the required competencies.
This changes the role of the TAS. It must operate as a defensible bridge between the training product, learner cohort, resources, delivery schedule, assessment approach, support arrangements and quality assurance controls.
A TAS that contains generic statements about duration, delivery mode or assessment methods creates risk. If your RTO cannot explain why the delivery model is appropriate, how students are supported to progress, and how sufficient time is provided for instruction, practice, feedback and assessment, the TAS becomes a compliance weakness.
This webinar helps you address that weakness before an audit, performance assessment or internal quality review exposes the gaps
Strengthen Your TAS Before Audit Exposes the Gaps
A weak TAS creates risk across the whole delivery system. It affects scheduling, resourcing, trainer consistency, student support, assessment timing and the credibility of your compliance evidence.
This webinar gives you a practical framework to review, strengthen and defend your TAS decisions under the Standards for RTOs 2025. Build TAS evidence that supports quality delivery, reduces audit exposure and gives your RTO stronger operational control.
Register Now — build a TAS your RTO can defend under scrutiny.