Experienced Solid Plasterers
Workers completing trade-level wet plastering and rendering work.
Solid Plastering RPL allows experienced solid plasterers and renderers to have their existing skills assessed against an Australian trade qualification.
Your experience may come from residential or commercial construction, external rendering, internal plaster finishes, renovations, restoration projects or operating your own plastering business.
Solid Plastering Recognition of Prior Learning assesses skills and knowledge gained through work or previous training. This may include employment, self-employment or overseas experience.
Your abilities are compared with the Certificate III in Solid Plastering requirements. Existing skills may be recognised, while further assessment or gap training may be required where a competency has not been demonstrated.
Solid Plastering RPL may suit workers who regularly prepare surfaces and apply plaster, cement render or specialised coatings.
Workers completing trade-level wet plastering and rendering work.
Renderers working across residential or commercial external surfaces.
Plastering business owners and subcontractors with project evidence.
Workers repairing, restoring or matching existing plaster finishes.
Workers completing projects across different sites and materials.
Workers with relevant overseas experience and supporting documents.
Workers with partial study and substantial workplace experience.
Skilled workers seeking formal recognition of existing competency.
The assessment reviews how you prepare, apply and finish plastering and rendering work across different projects.
| Skill Area | Examples of Work | Evidence That May Help |
|---|---|---|
| Plans and Specifications | Reading plans, specifications and project requirements. | Plans, work orders, site records and supervisor references. |
| Measurement and Materials | Measuring work areas and calculating plaster or render quantities. | Quotes, invoices, calculations and material schedules. |
| Surface Preparation | Preparing masonry, concrete and other substrates before application. | Stage photographs, work videos and job sheets. |
| Mixing Plaster and Render | Selecting and mixing suitable materials for the required finish. | Work videos, supplier records and practical demonstration. |
| Float and Render Coats | Applying and levelling float coats, render coats and base systems. | Progress photographs, project records and assessor observation. |
| Straight and Curved Surfaces | Applying plaster or render to straight, curved and detailed surfaces. | Project photos, plans, videos and client references. |
| Set Coats | Applying set coats and producing smooth internal plaster finishes. | Close-up photographs, work videos and technical questioning. |
| Textured Finishes | Producing textured, decorative or specialised finishes. | Project portfolios, specifications and practical evidence. |
| Repairs and Restoration | Repairing damaged surfaces and restoring existing plasterwork. | Before-and-after photos, restoration records and client references. |
| Quality and Safety | Checking completed finishes and using tools and materials safely. | Safety records, White Card, inspection records and observation. |
The qualification includes 20 units: 15 core units and 5 electives. Experienced workers may demonstrate the required competencies through RPL instead of completing the full course from the beginning.
Where a required area has not been demonstrated, more evidence, additional assessment or gap training may be required.
Your evidence should show the solid plastering or rendering work you personally completed or supervised.
Detailed references confirming plastering duties and work history.
Contracts supporting your role and period of employment.
Payslips supporting the duration of your work experience.
Photos showing preparation, coats, levelling, finishing and repairs.
Videos showing you mixing, applying and finishing materials.
Records showing assigned tasks and completed work.
Documents linking you to projects and responsibilities.
Plans or drawings connected to completed work.
Product, material and finish specifications used on projects.
Invoices and supplier records supporting project activity.
Verifiable references from clients, builders or supervisors.
White Card, SWMS and relevant workplace safety evidence.
Missing evidence does not automatically make you ineligible, but the assessor may request another project, technical questions, observation or gap training.
Broader evidence may be required across other materials and methods.
Curved, internal or detailed work may still need to be demonstrated.
Evidence should show complete trade-level plastering processes.
The qualification requires evidence of your own practical competency.
Different materials, coats or surface conditions may need evidence.
Internal finishing and set-coat skills may require more assessment.
Curved or detailed surfaces may need separate demonstration.
Preparation, mixing and application stages should also be shown.
Your work history, project types, previous training and plastering experience are reviewed.
Your experience is compared with the core units and selected electives in CPC31020.
The assessor checks whether evidence is current, relevant, authentic and sufficient.
Technical questions, referee checks, workplace observation or practical demonstration may be used.
The RTO makes the final decision and may request more evidence, assessment or gap training.
RPL assesses whether your existing skills meet the requirements of a vocational qualification such as the Certificate III in Solid Plastering.
A migration skills assessment is a separate process completed by the relevant assessing authority for visa or migration purposes. Receiving an RPL qualification does not automatically provide a positive migration skills assessment.
We review the type and range of plastering, rendering and restoration work completed.
We help identify records that may demonstrate preparation, application and finishing experience.
We assist employed, self-employed and overseas-experienced plasterers and renderers.
We explain where more evidence or assessment may be needed without promising an automatic outcome.
Plasterboard work is different from solid plastering. It may not demonstrate the wet plastering, rendering, set-coat and restoration skills required.
Yes. Acrylic rendering may provide relevant evidence, but you must still demonstrate the broader range of skills required for the qualification.
Yes. Restoration work may demonstrate how you assess damaged surfaces, prepare repairs and match existing finishes.
External rendering may cover several required skills. You may still need evidence or assessment for internal plastering, set coats, restoration or other areas.
The assessor may use technical questions, referee checks, workplace observation or a practical demonstration. Sufficient and reliable evidence is still required.
No. An RPL qualification does not automatically provide a contractor licence or registration. Licensing is separate and requirements vary by state or territory.
Have your plastering, rendering and restoration experience reviewed against the Certificate III pathway and learn what evidence may be required.