Intermediate
Critical thinking in the workplace refers to the ability to analyse information, question assumptions, evaluate evidence, and make well reasoned decisions. It is one of the most essential skills across modern workplaces because employees are constantly required to process large amounts of information, solve problems, and make choices that affect team outcomes. Critical thinking helps individuals move beyond habits and assumptions and instead use clear thinking, logic, and evidence to guide their decisions.
This course introduces learners to the foundations of critical thinking, including key principles, essential thinking behaviours, and the mindset required to examine information objectively. Learners will explore real workplace situations such as conflict resolution, teamwork, and everyday decision making. Through these examples, they will see how critical thinking supports fairness, reduces misunderstandings, prevents rushing into conclusions, and encourages more balanced and thoughtful responses.
Learners will also be introduced to a structured model for strengthening critical thinking. This model guides individuals through steps such as questioning, researching, analysing, evaluating, and concluding. These steps help learners break down complex problems and approach decisions with clarity and purpose. The course also covers practical techniques such as using open questions, identifying bias, organising information visually, listing pros and cons, and applying reflective thinking. By the end of the course, participants will be able to apply critical thinking confidently and use it to improve workplace performance, teamwork, and decision making.
Intermediate
Problem Solving in the Workplace is designed to help learners develop the essential skills needed to recognise, understand, and resolve problems in a structured and confident way. In every workplace, challenges can appear suddenly or build over time. These challenges can affect productivity, teamwork, safety, and overall workplace performance. This course provides learners with practical tools to understand problems clearly, identify root causes, evaluate solutions, and make informed decisions that lead to positive outcomes. It supports the development of calm thinking and organised approaches so that learners feel more prepared whenever an unexpected situation arises.
The course is based on the five step model of problem solving. These steps include understanding the problem, gathering information, comparing options, making a thoughtful decision, and reflecting on results. By strengthening these skills, learners increase their confidence, independence, and ability to adapt to change. The course also explores short term and long term problems, the role of reliable information, the importance of critical thinking, and how reflection helps learners understand what works and what can be improved. Problem solving is a key skill in almost every job, and improving it can make learners more successful, more capable, and more resilient in the workplace.
Basic
Stress Management in the Workplace is designed to help learners understand what stress is, how it develops, and how it influences daily functioning. Stress is a normal part of life and can motivate us to act, stay focused, and meet challenges. However, when stress builds up without relief, it begins to affect physical health, emotional wellbeing, behaviour, and workplace performance.
This course introduces learners to the concept of stress, explains how it affects the body and mind, and explores how ongoing pressure can make everyday tasks feel overwhelming. It also helps learners recognise how stress builds gradually, how it can affect communication, and how it influences decision making at work.
Basic
Time Management in the Workplace is a practical course designed to help learners understand how to organise their tasks, prioritise responsibilities, and use their time more effectively. In many workplaces, staff feel pressure from competing demands, unexpected tasks, and deadlines that need to be met.
When time is not managed well, tasks build up, stress increases, and performance declines. When time is managed effectively, work becomes more structured, tasks become easier to complete, and daily pressure reduces. This course explores what time management means, why it matters across all types of workplaces, and how simple habits can help workers feel more in control. It introduces the connection between time management, personal productivity, and workplace expectations.
Learners will explore common challenges such as feeling rushed, forgetting tasks, avoiding difficult jobs, multitasking too often, and allowing small distractions to interfere with important responsibilities. They will learn how to identify their priorities, reduce time wasting habits, and use strategies that help them stay focused. The workbook content emphasises the importance of planning, being organised, and acknowledging that even small improvements can make a significant difference in daily performance. By applying the skills explored in this course, learners will build confidence, reduce stress, and become more reliable and productive team members. They will also gain tools to improve their personal lives through better planning and more balanced routines.
Basic
The Presentation Skills course provides learners with the knowledge and practical techniques required to plan, prepare, and deliver clear, confident, and engaging presentations in the workplace. Presentations are a common communication requirement across many roles, and this course equips learners with the essential skills needed to organise content, design visual aids, practise delivery, manage audience expectations, and present with professionalism. The course follows a structured presentation development process that includes audience analysis, objective setting, content structuring, message refinement, practice strategies, delivery skills, and question handling methods.
Learners are introduced to the key components that make presentations effective. These include understanding the needs of the audience, developing a strong walk away message, applying a clear content structure, designing purposeful visual aids, and creating strong introductions and conclusions. The course explores practical techniques for maintaining audience engagement through interaction, storytelling, questioning, and thoughtful pacing. It also covers the importance of non verbal communication, including posture, gestures, facial expression, voice, and eye contact, which strongly influence how the message is received.
Finally, the course supports learners to overcome nervousness, manage the presentation environment, rehearse effectively, and present confidently in a range of situations. Learners will build the skills required to respond to questions clearly, maintain professionalism, and apply continuous improvement practices. By the end of the course, learners will be fully prepared to deliver presentations that are structured, memorable, and impactful.