Blended Learning

New RHS Level 2 Certificate in Practical Horticulture as 'Blended Learning'

Course dates at OtherTimePlacesPrice
31st October 202400.009£1710.00

Enrol for this course

This is a pilot course for 2024 -25 of an 'blended' delivery method for the new RHS Level 2 Certificate Practical Horticulture.

This is the first opportunity to study the new RHS Level 2 Practical if you are not able to travel regularly to a centre near you for a weekly course.  It will allow you to use online study combined with blocks of teaching to prepare for RHS Assessments. Because approval has only just been given for the pilot of this format, and the assessment days confirmed by the RHS, this year's course dates can only be published now and so there is a very short window until 31 October 2024 in which to enrol for this year's pilot course.

Since 2022 there is new content in the RHS Level 2 Certificate, and new assessment methods.  If you are a keen amateur gardener or a potential career-changer, the new format of this hands-on horticultural course has been designed to equip you with a wide range of horticultural skills  to carry out routine tasks proficiently in a variety of contexts: as well as propagation, pruning and plant care, these range from maintaining hard landscaping to using hedgetrimmers and lawnmowers. It also provides you with the opportunity to develop  transferable skills within a variety of horticultural settings. 

Because of this breadth, there is more emphasis on the underpinning knowledge behind the practical tasks in the syllabus and on an awareness of  'Qualification-Wide Outcomes' such as health and safety and best practice.

What will I study?

 You will study eight units, which make up this Certificate. These are:

·       1. Plant Identification

·       2. Plant establishment

·       3. Plant propagation

·       4. Plant health

·       5. Plant care:  how  to implement garden maintenance plans

·       6. Plant pruning

·       7. Care and maintenance of a range of garden features

·       8. Establish and maintain grassed areas

There are also four 'Qualification-wide Outcomes' of Health and Safety, Sustainability, Best Practice and Equality and Diversity which are referenced in all eight units, as well as in the theory qualification.

What is covered?

Click here for the RHS Level 2 Certificate in Practical Horticulture syllabus which provides you with a complete overview of the course.

Click here for a link to the RHS website which explains more about their new format qualifications which were introduced in September 2022.

How is it delivered and assessed?

RHS assessments:

Two Practical Competence Assessments (PCAs) will each cover three tasks from the syllabus and a plant identification test; these will be undertaken at the centre in spring and summer and assessed  by an external RHS examiner and a Centre assessor.  The centre does not know the tasks until the PCAs are being prepared. 

The tasks are marked according to method and proficiency; the pass mark is 50%, and this element  (both PCAs combined) provides 80% of the full assessment. Dates for assessment are arranged by the RHS and the centre at the beginning of the year.
A 75-minute online test (Online Competence Assessment) is taken at home at the end of the course on 20 June 2025.   The test is taken in line with RHS exam procedures  and consists of multiple choice questions based on 'real world scenarios' of horticultural situations; it is designed to test the application of knowledge.  The pass mark is 50% and this provides 20% of the assessment.
Final marks will only be awarded when both parts of the Assessment have been undertaken, but the Qualification will be graded as Pass, Merit or Distinction.

Course delivery: 

The course runs over an academic year.  Home study from October - June, with two weeks of practical work and assessment at our Ryton centre in February and late May, then an online multiple-choice examination taken at home in June.

Enrolling on this course involves a commitment to study a programme of seasonal weekly tasks at home, under the direction of your course tutor.  This will help you to practice and prepare for two block sessions of practical work at our Ryton centre. These are designed to help you improve the techniques you have practised at home (and in your work) and to become proficient ready for assessment  by an external RHS examiner at the end of the two weeks.

Online resources:
Course notes covering all the topics in the syllabus are downloadable from the online classroom (or available in printed form to purchase separately); these provide the background information for each part of the syllabus which is tested in the final online exam known as an OCA (online competence assessment).
Self-test quizzes in the online classroom will help you check your knowledge.
Narrated presentations in the online classroom  cover the key points for each practical topic;  there are also videos demonstrating the tasks, which with the Horticultural Standards in each section help you to identify the key points for proficiency and avoid errors in technique.

Plant identification  is part of all three assessments (the PCAs and the OCA), and is supported by weekly narrated presentations with self-test quizzes to help you to learn botanical names.
Once a month there will be a plant identification test from a video of  live specimens.

You will be given a structured programme which explains which topics you should work through and what materials you need to cover each week; for seasonality this will run roughly parallel to the weekly taught courses at our centres, but of course you will have leeway to work around local weather conditions and your own commitments. You will have a dedicated online tutor who will monitor your progress and give you encouragement and feedback if you upload pictures of your practical work  - for example photos of pruning cuts you have made, seed sown in trays or cuttings you have prepared.

Ryton teaching weeks and practical assessments:

Dates for this cannot be altered as an RHS Assessor has to be booked at the beginning of the year for the programme.

You will come to our  Ryton centre  for two weeks: 

Monday 17 February - Thursday 20 February and Monday 26 May - Thursday 29 May will be days of practical work, designed to perfect your skills, correct any poor techniques and also to give you a chance to practise any tasks which are not easy to cover  or resource at home ( e.g. assessing soil using a profile pit and also using pH and EC meters) culminating in a 'mock' , working against the clock under assessment conditions.  You will be given plant identification tests each day.  On Friday the centre will make preparations with the RHS for your two-hour PCA assessment. PCA1 will take place on Saturday 22 February and then PCA2 on Saturday 31 May.

If you fail the plant identification section of a PCA you will be able to retake this online on a date set by the RHS. If you fail up to two of the practical tasks, you will need to return to our centre on an agreed  Saturday or Sunday within one month to retake these specific tasks; if you fail to pass all three practical tasks you will need to go to a centre designated by the RHS on a date not yet announced for a complete retake of the PCA with new tasks. All retakes will incur further RHS exam fees. 

 

What qualification will I get?

When you have successfully completed all the constituent parts of the qualification The Royal Horticultural Society which award The RHS Level 2 Certificate in Horticultural Practice, graded either Pass, Merit or Distinction.

If you combine this with the RHS Level 2 certificate in Horticultural Principles, The RHS will award you with an RHS L2 Certificate in the Principles and Practices of Horticulture.

What is the cost and venue(s)?

Most of this course is made up of online study at home, supplemented by practice in your workplace, garden or allotment.  Blocks of teaching and assessment will take place at our Ryton centre near Coventry.

The RHS fees for the new Level 2 Practical Certificate are £210   - £20 registration  and £190 for examination  and assessment. The RHS have requested additional fees for the verification of this pilot programme of 'blended  learning' which take the complete RHS fees to £310. These RHS fees are now due at the beginning of the course as an itemised part of the initial payment.

Tuition fees: £1400, RHS fees £310  = total payable £1710, or £1732 if paid in four instalments of £433.

If you choose to pay in instalments your first payment of £433 constitutes a booking fee and your RHS fees which are non-refundable once paid to the RHS even if you decide not to take assessments. 

Please note: In the event of the course not running, the booking fee will be returned to you. 

The remainder of the course fees can be paid in three equal instalments of £433, on weeks 8, 16 and 24  (including an administration fee of £5.50 for each instalment). You can make these payments via the 'Make Payment' tab on the website.

Or you can ask us to set up a direct debit mandate when you book the course by indicating 'yes' on the enrolment form and we will be pleased to send you a mandate form by email. Once this has been returned to us we can request payments from your bank on or about weeks 8, 16 and 24 .

You will receive statements of account during your course; please note these are statements not additional invoices.

 

What is the enrolment process?

Enrolment for this pilot programme will be open until October 31 2024. You can enrol using the 'enrol for this course' button;  you will receive a confirmation of our enrolment and in October you will be sent access information for your online classroom.

What else do I need to know?

There are no formal entry requirements for this course.

THe RHS states: 'This qualification has been designed to provide learners with the breadth of horticultural knowledge and skills required to carry out routine tasks proficiently in a variety of contexts. It supports progression to employment within areas of the horticultural industries (such as professional gardening, landscaping, plant production and garden retail), as well as supporting learning in entry level roles in the early stages of a horticultural career. It is also designed to meet the needs of the amateur gardener. It also provides learners the opportunity of personal development, including the changing of careers and engagement in their learning and offers an opportunity to develop transferable skills such as problem solving, implementing management plans / programmes, and communication as part of their applied learning.

In terms of progression, it allows learners the opportunity to progress to further learning opportunities at Level 3, allowing progression to higher education, career advancement or entry in the horticultural industries at a more advanced, technical level.'

What can I do after completing this course?

An RHS Level 2 qualification is well respected in the horticultural industry and can be the first step in changing to a career in horticulture.This Certificate is an accepted route into the horticultural profession for the National Trust and many other large employers.

From this, you can go on to study the RHS theory Certificate, The RHS Level 2 Certificate in the Principles of Plant Growth and Development and work towards the RHS Level 2 Certificate in the Principles and Practices of Horticulture.

  It also gives you the opportunity to progress on to a level 3 course ( the new RHS Level 3 Practical Certificate and to an eventual Level 3 Diploma with a Level 3 theory Certificate and Award in Horticultural Investigation), in turn allowing progression to higher education or perhaps career advancement into supervision or management positions within the industry.