Agreement Officer MN Sarlie F2
Agreement Officer MN Sarlie F2
Agreement Officer MN Sarlie F2
Officer:Student Assessment
Administration:
Invigilation and Examination
Administration Division
Performance Agreement
PERSONAL DETAILS
Name: Mr MN Sarlie
Personnel number: 90014170
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3.1
The key performance areas for the Officer are the following:
1. Processing of exam question papers & typing audio cassettes
2. Communication and correspondence. (5 )
3. Invigilation and examination venues (90 )
4. Answer books administration and counter services
5. Mark capturing (5 )
3.2
In line with the three operational themes identified by the Principal and Vice-Chancellor for
Unisa for 2008, the focus areas for the Director for the period of the agreement are the
following:
1. Administration of permanent national examination centres. (40)
2. Administration of invigilators contracts.
(20)
(35)
(5)
4.1
The Officer is directly accountable to the Supervisor for the Officers performance, the
realization of this Performance Agreement and, more specifically, for the following:
4.1.1
4.1.2
4.1.3
4.1.4
4.1.5
Performing all other functions required of him by law or assigned to him by the
SUPERVISOR.
4.2
To enable the Officer to perform his duties and exercise the power entrusted to him, the
Supervisor undertakes to:
4.2.1
4.2.2
ensure the availability of adequate funds for the Officer to deliver against key
duties and responsibilities; and
4.2.3
4.3
The relationship between the Officer and the Supervisor is pivotal to the good
administration of the Division. Within this relationship, the Officer must act with integrity
and professionalism, within the law and with the utmost respect for the role of the
Supervisor.
4.4
The Officer is accountable to the Supervisor for carrying out the functions and duties of
the post of Officer for rendering free and frank advice to the Supervisor; for the general
conduct of the Division and the efficient, effective and economical management of the
activities of the Division.
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
5.1
The Officer reports to the Supervisor in respect of this whole agreement, particularly
when performance does not meet expectations.
The Officer must
5.1.1
alert the Supervisor to any emerging factors that could preclude the
achievement of any performance agreement undertakings
5.1.2
5.1.3
The Supervisor must review the performance of the Officer by 31 June 2008 and must
assess his performance by 15 November 2008.
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DISPUTE RESOLUTION
Any dispute that may arise from this agreement must be referred to the LINE MANAGER for
resolution.
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PERFORMANCE UNDERTAKING
In pursuance of the strategic direction the University has undertaken to achieve its mission
and vision, I, Moeghamed Naiem Sarlie, commit myself to achieve the outputs as contained
in the work plan (Appendix A) and the Directorates and Departments Operational Plan for
the period January 2008 to December 2008.
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The contents of this document have been discussed with and agreed upon by the Supervisor
Name: Mr MN SARLIE
Signature of Officer:
____________________________________________
Date:
____________________________________________
The contents of this document have been discussed with and agreed upon by the Officer
and Supervisor. I sign this agreement on behalf of the University.
Name: Mrs AS Cilliers
Signature of Supervisor:
____________________________________________
Date:
__________________________________________
INCUMBENT
DESIGNATION
KPA
Provide
leadership
aligned with the
Departments
and Directorates
strategic and
operational plans
Please complete
WEIGHT
Please complete
10
OBJECTIVES
DESIGNATION
Please complete
ACTIVITIES
IOP
TARGETS AND / OR
STANDARDS
Management approval
Management approval
7.6
2.1
7.1
8.2
2008-01-01 to 2008-12-31
PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
7.6
AGREEMENT PERIOD
Targets in development
plan
Level of participation
INTERDEPENDENCIES
OBJECTIVES
WEIGHT
KPA
11 Facilitate change
and transformation
2.1
Foster a culture of
continuous quality
improvement
aligned to the
approved ODL
model
2.5
Establish a culture
of performance,
accountability and
stewardship
through the IPMS
aligned with
corporate
performance
management
10
ACTIVITIES
IOP
INTERDEPENDENCIES
TARGETS AND / OR
STANDARDS
2.10
PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
WEIGHT
KPA
OBJECTIVES
Unisa Service
Charter to enhance
service excellence
and customer care
in the Portfolio
2.11
Exercise due
influence to
transform
organisational
climate and culture
in line with strategic
objectives and
institutional
priorities (see
dimensions of staff
satisfaction index)
30 Exercise
collective
responsibility for
the leadership of
the Department
and Directorate
10
ACTIVITIES
IOP
PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
Student satisfaction index
TARGETS AND / OR
STANDARDS
INTERDEPENDENCIES
Impact
Stakeholder feedback
Strategic priorities of
Directorate formulated
interactively with Director and
other line managers
OBJECTIVES
WEIGHT
KPA
ACTIVITIES
IOP
PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
TARGETS AND / OR
STANDARDS
INTERDEPENDENCIES
Colleagues
Comply with statutory and
Report on strategic priorities
Quality
regulatory directives
addressed within Directorate
meetings indicating issues that
Actively participate in departmental
Due dates
have been resolved, impact
risk management
Consultation
achieved and own contribution
Contribute to the Departments
Composition of
32 Oversee effective
implementation
of Directorates
operational plan
34 Effectively
40
20
Quality of leadership and guidance in terms of setting norms and standards, assigning targets via the delegation process, allocating resources and ensuring regular reporting and
appropriate corrective action to achieve the following targets:
To be completed
4.1
4.2
To be completed
4.3
To be completed
4.4
To be completed
4.5
To be completed
4.6
To be completed
4.7
To be completed
4.8
To be completed
8.1
Productivity levels of
Directorate
WEIGHT
KPA
manage human
and other
resources in the
Directorate in
order to achieve
Directorate plans
OBJECTIVES
Management Team
and ensure effective
human resource
management in the
Directorate
37 Practise
professional
citizenship
10
ACTIVITIES
IOP
PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
Management Team
and Directorate in
general
Quality of interpersonal
relations in Directorate
Management Team
Motivation levels in
Directorate
Management Team
Compliance
Competence level of
staff in the Directorate
Disciplinary and
grievances statistics
Staff satisfaction Index
TARGETS AND / OR
STANDARDS
Management Team
Compliance with relevant Unisa
HR policies, rules and
regulations
HR practices aligned to those of
the University
Directorate Team developed
and qualified to achieve
university objectives and
individual work plans
Staff satisfaction index targets
achieved
Directorate climate index
targets achieved
% goal achievement
7.6
Quality of contributions
4.3
Quality of contributions
10
INTERDEPENDENCIES
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DIRECT SUPERVISOR:
INCUMBENTS JOB
TITLE:
INCUMBENTS PERSONNEL
NUMBER:
INCUMBENTS JOB
GRADE:
TRAINING/ DEVELOPMENT
PRIORITY
RELEVANT KPA,
OBJECTIVE OR ACTIVITY
IN PERFORMANCE
AGREEMENT
TRAINING INTERVENTION
NEEDED (e.g. Customer
Care course)
TARGET DATE
CRITICAL (within 3
months)
Directly related to improving
critical work performance
2 CORE (within 6 months)
Enables an employee to
perform core areas of the job
content
3
INTERMEDIATE (within 12
months)
Enables an employee to
perform the remaining aspects
of the job content
4 ADVANCED
Enables employees to perform
specialised areas of the job
family
5 DEVELOPMENTAL/
ELECTIVE
Provides opportunities for
personal & professional growth
& development
SIGNATURES
Direct Supervisor:
Job Incumbent:
Date:
Date:
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NAME OF PERSON
RESPONSIBLE FOR
MONITORING (e.g. Direct
Supervisor)
COMMENTS
Outstanding
Exceeds expectations
Meets expectations
All job requirements were met and planned objectives were accomplished
within established standards. There were no critical areas where
accomplishments were less than planned.
Needs improvement
Performance in one or more critical areas does not meet expectations. Not
all planned objectives were accomplished within the established standards
and some responsibilities were not completely met.
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Introduction
Managing performance at the individual job level involves a cycle of activities. The UNISA performance management system has four stages to it, namely:
During this stage the performance commitments, deliverables, performance standards and time frames are developed and recorded in the agreement. Once the agreement is signed, the
Agreement Planning and Formulation Stage is completed.
During this stage, the job incumbent implements her/his performance agreement, using her/his usual management methods, systems, procedures and University infrastructure. Progress
against the deliverables and performance indicators identified and recorded in the agreement (some of which are emerging UNISA Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)) are monitored on a
regular basis.
The incumbent reports back on a quarterly basis to her/his direct supervisor. UNISAs Integrated Performance Management Systems (IPMS) document refers to these report-backs as
performance conversations since this concept indicates the style and sentiment in which these reviews are to be held. During the performance conversations, the supervisor would provide
advice and guidance to the incumbent as required. Attention should be paid to the constraints and unplanned-for issues that could impact on the achievement of the deliverables required by
the incumbents performance agreement. Exploring constructive ways of overcoming the constraints and unplanned-for issues should form the core of the performance review meetings.
After the end of December, as specified in the performance agreement, the performance of the incumbent is formally evaluated.
Not all performance turns out as planned, nor is this always solely the result of non-performance. Sometimes, the performance targets established cannot be achieved within required
timeframes with the resources provided. On other occasions circumstances or events change and the original performance targets are no longer valid. If this occurs, very little advantage is to
be gained by rigidly adhering to the original performance targets and constantly identifying performance shortfalls. In these cases, a process of replanning and reformulation of more realistic
performance targets should be entered into.
Nevertheless, if a performance shortfall does occur because the incumbent has a skill or competency limitation that is exposed during the review and/or assessment stages, then corrective
actions must be taken. This involves the creation of a personal development Plan so the performance shortfall can be addressed. This step can be initiated at any stage during the
performance management cycle and should not wait until a formal performance appraisal is undertaken at the end of the year. It must, however, automatically be initiated as a standard
management step should a weak or negative performance rating be obtained during the annual performance appraisal.
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