"THE ACADEMY LEVELS CONTAIN SOME OF THE MOST FUNDAMENTAL DISCOVERIES REGARDING LIFE AND THE HUMAN MIND THAT HAVE EVER BEEN DISCOVERED IN THE HISTORY OF THIS UNIVERSE. THEY ARE A BASIC, SWEEPING TRAINING GROUND IN HANDLING LIFE AND PEOPLE." -LRH
NAME:________________________ORG:_________________________
POST:_____________________________________________________
DATE STARTED: _______________ DATE COMPLETED:______________
This checksheet contains the vital survival knowledge of Scientology Level III technology. It covers the technology dealing with upsets (ARC breaks).
PREREQUISITES:
(Method One Word Clearing is a prerequisite for training at this level, except where waived by a qualified C/S as covered in HCO PL 25 Sept. 79RB 11, Rev. 1.7.85, METHOD ONE WORD CLEARING.)
STUDY TECH: Study tech is to be applied in full throughout this course. The materials are to be studied and drilled in sequence. By initialing the blank after each checksheet entry, you are attesting that you fully understand and can apply the data. DRILLS ARE TO BE DONE FULLY TO THEIR RESULT. If you are not a fast flow student, you must star-rate check out on all items marked with an asterisk (*). (Ref. HCOB 13 Aug. 72RA, FAST FLOW TRAINING) The course does not require twinning.
BASIC TEXTS:
The student must have these books, course pack and lectures.
The student also must have his own E-Meter, as it will be needed during this course to do the required drills and auditing.
You are required to maintain a standard course schedule. Study and work during your class periods and outside of class. You have a lot to study and get checked out on in order to complete this course. You can't afford to waste time. You may be credited with materials you have studied on previous checksheets.
TECHNICAL TRAINING FILMS:
"THE TECHNICAL TRAINING FILMS ARE DESIGNED SPECIFICALLY TO CLARIFY AND GREATLY IMPROVE AND SPEED THE TRAINING OF AUDITORS." -LRH
These LRH films can help you achieve a high level of skill and certainty as an auditor and are a vital part of Academy training. Before you may graduate from this course, each of the films assigned to it is viewed along with the student body in regularly scheduled showings.
You must also have seen all films assigned to earlier courses before completing this checksheet.
You may view each film as many times as needed to ensure you have fully grasped the tech presented in it. Viewing these films more than once is recommended: Number of times over the material equals certainty and results.
After the first viewing of a single film, you must be word cleared on that film before viewing it again or viewing the next film.
PRODUCT: A Hubbard Professional Auditor who is able to audit others to Grade III Freedom Release standardly.
CERTIFICATE: On completion of this checksheet you may be awarded a provisional HUBBARD PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR certificate. A provisional certificate is only valid for one year unless validated by successful completion of the Class IV Internship.
LENGTH OF COURSE: 2 weeks full time.
_____ 1. HCO PL 7 Feb. 65 - KSW Series 1 KEEPING SCIENTOLOGY WORKING
_____ 2. HCO PL 17 June 70RB, Re-rev. 25.10.83 - KSW Series 5R TECHNICAL DEGRADES
(NOTE: The films assigned to this course and its prerequisite courses, along with any drills called for in those films, are listed in a directive issued to Course Administrators.)
1. (To be done before the end of this course.) View any films assigned to courses which are prerequisites for this course that you have not already viewed. Any drill that is specified in a particular film is to be done after viewing that film. These films and their drills are to be filled in by the Course Administrator.
a. Film:____________________________________
_____ To be viewed before the end of this course.
_____ Drill:______________________________________
b. Film:____________________________________
_____ To be viewed before the end of this course.
_____ Drill:______________________________________
c. Film:____________________________________
_____ To be viewed before the end of this course.
_____ Drill:______________________________________
d. Film:____________________________________
_____ To be viewed before the end of this course.
_____ Drill:______________________________________
2. The Course Administrator fills in the films assigned to this course in the blanks provided below before you begin this checksheet. The point on the checksheet where each film should be viewed is also filled in, as well as any drill called for in that film. Any drill that is specified in a particular film is to be done after viewing that film.
If a film is not scheduled for showing when you reach the indicated point on your checksheet, continue on with your study and see the film at its next scheduled showing.
Once you have viewed and been word cleared on a film, put your initials and the date in the blanks provided next to each film's title. When you do any drill called for in that film, put your initials and date in the blank provided.
a. Film:_____________________________________
_____ To be viewed while studying section _________.
_____ Drill:_______________________________________
b. Film:_____________________________________
_____ To be viewed while studying section _________.
_____ Drill:_______________________________________
c. Film:_____________________________________
_____ To be viewed while studying section _________.
_____ Drill:_______________________________________
d. Film:_____________________________________
_____ To be viewed while studying section _________.
_____ Drill:_______________________________________
_____* 1. CLASSIFICATION, GRADATION AND AWARENESS CHART OF LEVELS AND CERTIFICATE - Class III Auditor section and Grade III Expanded section.
_____ 2. HCO PL 23 Oct. 80R II, Rev. 16.11.87 - CHART OF ABILITIES GAINED FOR LOWER LEVELS AND EXPANDED LOWER GRADES
_____ 3. DEMO: The Abilities Gained for Grade III.
_____ 1. Chapter: "A Description of Scientology"
_____ 2. Chapter: "The Factors"
_____ 3. Chapter: "The Qs (The Prelogics)"
_____ 4. Chapter: "Consideration and Mechanics"
_____ 5. DEMO: What is meant by "considerations take rank over the mechanics of space, energy and time."
_____ 6. Chapter: "The Axioms of Scientology"
7. DEMO: Each of the Axioms of Scientology
1_____ 21_____ 41_____
2_____ 22_____ 42_____
3_____ 23_____ 43_____
4_____ 24_____ 44_____
5_____ 25_____ 45_____
6_____ 26_____ 46_____
7_____ 27_____ 47_____
8_____ 28_____ 48_____
9_____ 29_____ 49_____
10_____ 30_____ 50_____
11_____ 31_____ 51_____
12_____ 32_____ 52_____
13_____ 33_____ 53_____
14_____ 34_____ 54_____
15_____ 35_____ 55_____
16_____ 36_____ 56_____
17_____ 37_____ 57_____
18_____ 38_____ 58_____
19_____ 39_____
20_____ 40_____
_____ 8. Chapter: "The Auditor's Code AD18"
_____ 9. Chapter: "The Code of Honor"
10. DEMO: Each of the points of the Code of Honor.
1_____ 6_____ 11_____
2_____ 7_____ 12_____
3_____ 8_____ 13_____
4_____ 9_____ 14_____
5_____ 10_____ 15_____
_____ 11. Chapter: "The Code of a Scientologist"
_____ 12. Chapter: "The Creed of the Church"
_____ 13. Chapter: "The Supervisor's Code and Stable Data"
_____ 14. Chapter: "The Credo of a Good and Skilled Manager"
_____ 15. Chapter: "Primary Axioms from the Original Thesis"
_____ 16. Chapter: "The Fundamental Axioms of Dianetics"
_____ 17. Chapter: "The Logics"
18. DEMO: Each of the Logics.
1_____ 11_____ 21_____
2_____ 12_____ 22_____
3_____ 13_____ 23_____
4_____ 14_____ 24_____
5_____ 15_____
6_____ 16_____
7_____ 17_____
8_____ 18_____
9_____ 19_____
10_____ 20_____
_____ 19. Chapter: "The Axioms of Dianetics"
_____ 20. Chapter: "The Perceptics"
21. Chapter: "A Book of Scales"
_____ a. Scales
_____ b. Scale: The Tone Scale
_____ c. Scale: Emotion and Affinity Scale
_____ d. Scale: Reality and Communication Scale
_____ e. Scale: Behavior and Physiological Scale
_____ f. Scale: Scale of Motion
_____ g. DEMO: Demonstrate an example of how someone reacts at each point on the Scale of Motion.
_____ h. Scale: The Emotional Tone Scale
_____ i. Scale: The Tone Scale in Full
_____ j. Scale: DEI to CDEI
_____ k. Scale: CDEI Cycle with Lower Scale
_____ l. Scale: Points of Case Address
_____ m. Scale: Scale of Identification
_____ n. Scale: A Table of Relationships
_____ o. Scale: Know-to-Mystery Scale
_____ p. Scale: Scale of Knowingness
_____ q. Scale: A Pan-Determinism Scale
_____ r. Scale: Responsibility Scale
_____ s. DEMO: The responsibility level at each step of the Responsibility Scale.
_____ t. Scale: Havingness Scale
_____ u. Scale: The Prehavingness Scale
_____ v. Scale: Effect Scale
_____ w. Scale: An Awareness Scale
_____ x. Scale: Scale of Confront
_____ y. Scale: Reality-Spotting by E-Meter
_____ z. Scale: Time Sense, Deterioration of
_____ aa. Article: "Charge and the Time Track"
_____ bb. Scale: State of Case Scale
_____ cc. Scale: Awareness Characteristics
_____ dd. Scale: Lower Awareness Levels
_____ ee. Scale: States Attained
_____ 22. Chapter: "The Axioms of SOP 8-C"
_____* 1. HCOB 21 Sept. 66 - ARC BREAK NEEDLE
_____ 2. DEMO: An ARC break needle.
_____ 3. DEMO: How an auditor would be able to tell the difference between an ARC break needle and a floating needle.
_____* 4. HCOB 2 Dec. 80 - FLOATING NEEDLE AND TA POSITION MODIFIED
5. DRILL: Do the following E-Meter drills per The Book of E-Meter Drills. The Course Supervisor will issue pink sheets for any earlier E-Meter drills observed to be out.
_____ a. E-Meter Drill 12: "Needle Actions"
_____ b. E-Meter Drill 14: "Needle Motion and No Motion Recognition"
_____ c. E-Meter Drill 15: "Familiarization with Reading an E-Meter"
_____ d. E-Meter Drill 16: "The Production of Needle Actions"
_____ e. E-Meter Drill 19: "Instant Reads"
_____ f. E-Meter Drill 22: "E-Meter Hidden Date, This Life"
_____ g. E-Meter Drill 24: "Assessment by Instant Read"
_____ h. E-Meter Drill 25: "Track Dating"
_____ i. CR0000-4: "See the Session"
_____* 1. HCOB 6 Nov. 64 - STYLES OF AUDITING (Section headed LEVEL III, ABRIDGED-STYLE AUDITING)
_____ 2. DEMO: What is meant by "Abridged-Style Auditing"?
_____ 1. Tape: 5411C01 8ACC-23 - TWO-WAY COMMUNICATION
_____* 2. HCOB 21 Apr. 70 - 2-WAY COMM C/Ses
_____ 3. DEMO: In two-way comm, "A correct session is for the auditor to hold to the C/S's main line of questioning no matter how he phrases it and listen to and write down what the pc says."
_____* 4. HCOB 3 July 70 - C/S Series 14, C/Sing 2-WAY COMM
_____ 5. DEMO: Why two-way comm is auditing.
6. DEMO: Demo points F, G, H, I, J, K, L, N and O as given in HCOB 3 July 70, C/Sing 2-WAY COMM.
_____ F
_____ G
_____ H
_____ I
_____ J
_____ K
_____ L
_____ N
_____ O
_____* 7. HCOB 17 Mar. 74 - TWO-WAY COMM, USING WRONG QUESTIONS
_____ 8. DEMO: Why a "who," "what" or "which" question is not used in two-way comm auditing.
9. DEMO: Why two-way comm questions should be limited to:
_____ a. feelings
_____ b. reactions
_____ c. significances
_____ 10. DRILL: Two-way comm on a doll, using fruit subjects. The coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student has demonstrated he can standardly Run two-way comm and take a two-way comm question to EP, including handling the meter and keeping standard admin.
_____* 1. HCOB 19 Dec. 80R, Rev. 16.11.87 - REHAB TECH
_____ 2. CLAY DEMO: What happens in the pc's bank when he gets overrun and how you handle this by rehab procedure.
_____ 3. DEMO: Rehab by Counting.
_____ 4. DEMO: Each step of Rehab '65 Style.
5. DEMO: The three main reasons why a release rehab on a subject or action might hang up.
_____ 1
_____ 2
_____ 3
6. DRILL: Release rehabilitation on a doll. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Subjects used for rehabbing deal with fruit, e.g., rehabbing a release on "eating an apple." Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student has demonstrated he can standardly run each of the types of rehab procedure listed.
a. Rehab '65 Style procedure
_____ Unbullbaited
_____ Bullbaited
b. Rehab by Counting procedure
_____ Unbullbaited
_____ Bullbaited
_____ c. Handling out-ruds that are hanging up a rehab
_____ d. Rehabbing an earlier subject or action on the track that was similar to the one being rehabbed
_____* 1. HCOB 27 May 63 - CAUSE OF ARC BREAKS
_____ 2. Tape: 6305C28 SHSBC-269 - HANDLING ARC BREAKS
3. CLAY DEMO:
_____ a. "RULE: ALL ARC BREAKS ARE CAUSED BY BYPASSED CHARGE."
_____ b. "RULE: TO TURN OFF AN ARC BREAK, FIND AND INDICATE THE CORRECT BYPASSED CHARGE."
_____ c. "RULE: FINDING AND INDICATING AN INCORRECT BYPASSED CHARGE WILL NOT TURN OFF AN ARC BREAK."
_____ 4. Tape: 6307C24 SHSBC-289 - ARC BREAKS AND THE COMM CYCLE
_____* 5. HCOB 19 Aug. 63 - HOW TO DO AN ARC BREAK ASSESSMENT
_____ 6. DEMO: The chief uses of an ARC break assessment.
_____* 7. HCOB 7 Sept. 64 II - PTPS, OVERTS AND ARC BREAKS
_____ 8. DEMO: The difference between an ARC break assessment and a bypassed charge assessment, and the use of each.
_____* 9. HCOB 29 Mar. 65 - ARC BREAKS
_____ 10. DEMO: "AN ARC BREAK OCCURS ON A GENERALITY OR A NOT-THERE."
_____* 11. HCOB 4 Apr. 65 - ARC BREAKS AND MISSED WITHHOLDS
_____ 12. DEMO: What you would do as an auditor, and why, if you had a pc who seemed to have a lot of ARC breaks.
_____* 1. HCOB 29 Apr. 80R, Rev. 26.7.86 - PREPARED LISTS, THEIR VALUE AND PURPOSE
2. DEMO: Each of the types of prepared lists, and their use.
_____ a. an analysis list
_____ b. a direct auditing list
_____ c. a correction list
_____ d. a drill list
_____* 3. HCOB 14 Mar. 71R, Rev. 25.7.73 - F/N EVERYTHING
_____ 4. CLAY DEMO: "NEVER WALK OFF FROM A READING ITEM ON A RUDIMENT OR A PREPARED REPAIR LIST BEFORE YOU CARRY IT DOWN (EARLIER-SIMILAR) TO AN F/N."
_____* 5. HCOB 3 July 71R, Rev. 22.2.79 - AUDITING BY LISTS
6. DEMO:
_____ a. Method 3 assessment
_____ b. Method 5 assessment
_____ c. What to do if a pc has a big win partway through the handling of a prepared list
_____* 7. HCOB 4 Dec. 78 - HOW TO READ THROUGH AN F/N
_____ 8. ESSAY: Why it is important for an auditor to know how to read through an F/N.
_____ 9. DRILL: Sit down in front of a meter with an F/Ning student on the cans and assess the prepared lists in The Book of E-Meter Drills. Spot each time you get a "check" or a "slow" or any change in an otherwise continuing F/N. Coach sits behind student and flunks any miscalled reads, referring the student to the exact LRH reference. The drill is passed when the student can read through an F/N and is adept at this.
_____* 10. HCOB 15 Oct. 73RC, Re-rev. 26.7.86 - C/S Series 87RC, NULLING AND F/Ning PREPARED LISTS
_____* 11. HCOB 6 Dec. 73 - C/S Series 90, THE PRIMARY FAILURE
_____ 12. DEMO: What effect missing reads on a prepared list can have.
_____ 13. HCOB 22 Apr. 80R, Rev. 26.7.86 - ASSESSMENT DRILLS
_____ 14. DRILL: TR 4/8-Q1: "Tone 40 Assessment Prepared List Session Drill"
_____* 15. HCOB 19 Mar. 71 - LIST 1C-L1C
_____ 16. DRILL: L1C assessment and handling, on a doll. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student has demonstrated he can standardly assess and handle an L1C using Method 3 and Method 5.
_____ a. L1C Method 3
_____ b. L1C Method 5
_____ 17. HCOB 23 July 80R, Rev. 26.7.86 - CONFESSIONAL REPAIR LIST-LCRE
18. DRILL: LCRE assessment and handling, on a doll. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student has demonstrated he can standardly assess and handle an LCRE using Method 3 and Method 5.
_____ a. LCRE Method 3
_____ b. LCRE Method 5
_____ 1. Tape: 6207C17 SHSBC-170 - E-METER READS AND ARC BREAKS
_____ 2. DEMO: What happens in the bank when you give the pc an incorrect item.
_____ 3. Tape: 6208C09 SHSBC-183 - GOALS LISTING
_____ 4. HCOB 22 Aug. 66 - FLOATING NEEDLES, LISTING PROCESSES
_____* 5. HCOB 1 Aug. 68 - THE LAWS OF LISTING AND NULLING
6. DEMO: Each of the Laws of L&N:
_____ Law 1
_____ Law 2
_____ Law 3
_____ Law 4
_____ Law 5
_____ Law 6
_____ Law 7
_____ Law 8
_____ Law 9
_____ Law 10
_____ Law 11
_____ Law 12
_____ Law 13
_____ Law 14
_____ Law 15
_____ Law 16
_____ Law 17
_____ Law 18
_____ Law 19
_____ Law 20
_____ 7. PRACTICAL: Learn the Laws of Listing and Nulling verbatim. Checkout by Course Supervisor.
_____* 8. HCOB 19 Sept. 68 - "Old lists…"
_____* 9. HCOB 7 Oct. 68 - ASSESSMENT
_____ 10. HCOB 20 Sept. 78 - AN INSTANT F/N IS A READ
_____ 11. DRILL: TR 4/8-Q2: "Listing and Nulling Tone 40 Assessment" (Per HCOB 22 Apr. 80R, ASSESSMENT DRILLS)
12. DRILL: Listing and nulling on a doll. Use fruit names in making up questions and items. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH material violated. The drill is passed when student has demonstrated he can standardly handle the situations and actions given below, exactly by the Laws of Listing and Nulling, and while keeping standard admin.
_____ a. Checking a listing question for a read, including the use of Suppress and Invalidate buttons.
_____ b. Listing and nulling to a complete list.
_____ c. Handling a list on which the TA is rising.
_____ d. Nulling an overlisted list and finding nothing.
_____ e. Nulling a list with Suppress button and nulling a list with Invalidate button.
_____ f. Handling a list where partway through nulling everything starts reading.
_____* 13. HCOB 20 Apr. 72 II - C/S Series 78, PRODUCT PURPOSE AND WHY AND W/C ERROR CORRECTION
_____* 14. HCOB 11 Apr. 77 - LIST ERRORS, CORRECTION OF
_____* 15. HCOB 15 Dec. 68RA, Re-rev. 11.4.77 - L4BRA, FOR ASSESSMENT OF ALL LISTING ERRORS
_____ 16. DRILL: Assessing and handling the L4BRA until you can handle each of its lines. The coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the L&N materials on this checksheet. The drill is passed when the student has demonstrated he can standardly assess and handle the L4BRA.
17. DRILL: Handling additional listing and nulling situations on a doll. Use fruit names in making up questions and items. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing the cans to simulate reads. Flunks are handled by reference to the exact LRH material violated. The drill is passed when student has demonstrated he can standardly handle the situations and actions given below, exactly by the Laws of Listing and Nulling, and while keeping standard admin:
_____ a. Verifying/correcting past L&N lists.
_____ b. Reconstructing a list for which there are no worksheets.
_____ 1. Tape: 6308C07 SHSBC-292 - R2H FUNDAMENTALS
_____ 2. CLAY DEMO: Change and its relation to ARC breaks.
_____ 3. Tape: 6308C08 SHSBC-293 - R2H ASSESSMENT
_____* 4. HCOB 6 Aug. 68 - R3H
_____ 5. HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB, Rev. 16.11.87 - MINI LIST OF GRADE 0-IV PROCESSES (11,12)
6. DRILL:
a. Study the commands for #11 in HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB and drill it on a doll with full session setup. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing them to simulate reads. On any flunk the coach shows the student the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student can standardly run the process with the meter and keep session admin.
_____ Unbullbaited
_____ Bullbaited
b. Study the commands for #12 in HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB and drill it on a doll with full session setup. Coach answers for the doll and holds the cans, squeezing them to simulate reads. On any flunk the coach shows the student the exact LRH reference violated. The drill is passed when the student can standardly run the process with the meter and keep session admin.
_____ Unbullbaited
_____ Bullbaited
_____ 1. HCOB 14 Nov. 87 V - EXPANDED GRADE III PROCESS CHECKLIST
The following attest is to be signed off, point by point, before the student begins to audit Grade III processes.
If the student has any question or reservation about attesting to any of the points below, he should retread himself in that area.
Only when the student has acquired these skills without question will he or she achieve good results on Grade III processes.
I attest that:
_____ a. I know and can fully apply the study technology given in the Student Hat.
_____ b. I have applied the study technology of the Student Hat fully while on this course.
_____ c. I have seen and I understand all Technical Training Films assigned to the Professional TR Course and Academy Levels 0-III.
_____ d. I have acquired good Assessment TRs by drilling each to EP.
_____ e. I understand the E-Meter and am able to use it standardly and with confidence in handling rudiments, assessment and L&N.
_____ f. I have a good grasp of the technology on ARC breaks, PTPs and missed withholds and can apply it standardly.
_____ g. I understand and can apply the materials on two-way comm processing standardly.
_____ h. I understand release rehabilitation procedure and can apply it standardly.
_____ i. I am able to assess and handle prepared lists accurately.
_____ j. I have a good grasp of the Laws of Listing and Nulling and can apply them standardly.
_____ k. I can correct listing and nulling actions where errors have been made.
_____ l. I fully understand the theory and procedure of checking questions or commands on Grades processes for read, and can apply them.
If the student has not completed Method One Word Clearing an examination is fully passed in Qual on the materials of this checksheet
STUDENT EXAMINER: _____________________________DATE: ____________
The student now begins student auditing of Grade III processes. Pcs are procured per HCO PL 8 June 70RC II, STUDENT AUDITING.
The student must not and cannot be required by anyone to audit processes above his training level. Where upper-level processes are necessary for a case, upper-level students should be called upon to audit the actions.
NOTE: YOU ARE NOW QUALIFIED TO BEGIN CO-AUDITING OF EXPANDED GRADE III (WITH C/S OK), AND MAY DO SO IF YOU WISH. YOU ARE NOT REQUIRED TO AUDIT THE EXPANDED GRADE IN ORDER TO COMPLETE THIS CHECKSHEET.
Ref: HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB, Rev. 16.11.87 - MINI LIST OF GRADE 0-IV PROCESSES
_____ 1. PRACTICAL: Audit #11 per HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB on a pc to completely satisfactory results by exam report and C/S attest.
_____ 2. PRACTICAL: Audit #12 per HCOB 8 Sept. 78RB on a pc to completely satisfactory results by exam report and C/S attest.
_____ 3. CONDITIONAL: Get any errors or misunderstandings on the standard application of the materials of Level III reviewed and corrected.
I attest that I have successfully fulfilled the auditing requirements for certification on Level III, as given above.
STUDENT ATTEST: _______________________________DATE: ____________
I attest this student has successfully fulfilled the Level II auditing requirements for certification, as given above, and has demonstrated his competence in auditing the style of this level.
SUPERVISOR ATTEST: ____________________________DATE: ____________
STUDENT C/S ATTEST: ___________________________DATE: ____________
I have completed the requirements of this checksheet and I know and can apply this material.
STUDENT ATTEST: _______________________________DATE: ____________
I have trained this student to the best of my ability and he has completed the requirements of this checksheet and knows and can apply the checksheet data.
SUPERVISOR ATTEST: ____________________________DATE: ____________
I attest: (a) I have enrolled on the course, (b) I have paid for the course, (c) I have studied and understand all the materials on the checksheet, (d) I have done all the drills on this checksheet, (e) I can produce the results required in the materials of the course.
STUDENT ATTEST: _______________________________DATE: ____________
C&A: __________________________________________DATE: ____________
3. STUDENT INFORMED RE: CERTIFICATE VALIDATION BY C&A:
I hereby attest that I have informed the student that to make his provisional certificate permanent he will have to be interned within one year.
C&A: __________________________________________DATE: ____________
This graduate has been issued a certificate of HUBBARD PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR (Provisional).
C&A: __________________________________________DATE: ____________
(Route this form to the Course Administrator for filing in the student's folder.)
(The directions, drills and study assignments which make up this course checksheet were written by LRH Technical Research and Compilations staff. The compilation of this checksheet was done according to specific LRH advices on what materials should be on this course, as well as LRH policies and instructions which prescribe the standard format for course checksheets.)