The report is the product. Here it is, open.
We show the full format before you pay for it. Below is a specimen report and the certificate it comes with. Judge the depth and the plain language for yourself.
Specimen report and certificate
Plain-language notes
Strong on safety judgement and staying steady when a situation escalates. Communication with parents reads as the area worth a short conversation, or a refresher chapter, before a placement of trust. None of this is a verdict on the person.
Issued 12 June 2026
Certificate of Caregiver Assessment
Independent assessment · not a placement or training endorsement
This certifies that
Maryam D.
has completed the Child Caregiver Knowledge Assessment (CCKA™), administered under standardised conditions.
Contact us to confirm a certificate.
Every report arrives with a certificate carrying a unique assessment reference. Verify a reference by email at launch, with an online lookup to follow. The accreditation line stays blank until our independent accreditation is confirmed.
What a report contains
Nothing sits behind the payment that you cannot see here first. Each report sets out:
- An overall read in one honest line, never reduced to a single pass mark that implies a benchmark we have not yet published.
- A score for each area, so strength and gaps are visible separately rather than averaged away.
- Plain-language notes that name where a gap is and, if it helps, point to the matching chapter of the course as an optional next step. There is no obligation to buy it.
- The scope and limits of what an assessment can and cannot tell you, attached to every report.
- A certificate with the caregiver’s name, the assessment, the date, and a unique reference number, theirs to keep and to show.
Reports and certificates download as PDF. Agency results also export to CSV from the buyer portal.
Open enough to judge, careful enough to trust.
A real caregiver’s results are sensitive personal data, handled in line with UAE PDPL. So a public specimen has every identifying detail replaced and is watermarked, which is exactly the redaction discipline we apply to the data itself.
We apply the same instrument and the same thresholds to everyone, scored to a documented rubric rather than to opinion, with validation underway and the method published openly as it matures. Read how the instrument is built, or see how we handle data.
Questions about the specimen
Read all FAQs →Is this a real caregiver’s report?
No. This is a specimen with illustrative values, shown so you can judge the format and depth before you pay for it. The name, scores, and notes are fictional. We will never pass off an invented result as a real person’s.
Do the scores mean a caregiver passed?
The numbers here are illustrative only. A report gives an honest overall read and a score per area; it informs a decision and does not guarantee suitability or safety. Read it alongside references, a trial period, and your own judgement.
How do I know a real report came from you?
Every report and certificate carries a unique assessment reference number. At launch you can confirm a reference is genuine by email, with an online lookup to follow. A reference that cannot be verified did not come from us.
Is the certificate accredited?
Our independent accreditation is in progress, so the certificate face does not name a body yet. What is real today is the verifiable assessment reference. We will add the accreditation line only once it is confirmed and licensed to display. See our methodology.
Can an agency get every report in one place?
Yes. Buy seats in bulk, invite each caregiver with their own single-use code so seats cannot be casually shared or replayed, and read every report and certificate centrally with CSV export. See pricing.
This is what you get. Now decide with your eyes open.
If you are assessing one caregiver, you can start now. If you are an agency, an institution, or a government buyer assessing many, we can set you up with bulk seats, a central results portal, an invoice, and a data-processing agreement.
An assessment informs a decision; it does not guarantee a caregiver’s suitability or safety, and it is not a clinical diagnosis.