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One thing may be incorrect

The course says "in the case of a flammable substance spillage, switch off all electrical equipment." I do not think that this is good advice. Switching off electrical equipment locally to a flammable gas or vapour could result in spark ignition. It is safer to leave the electrical equipment on, and evacuate the area. Then turn off the electricity remotely. This can be done at the fuse board for instance.

Informative

The information in this was very good, and useful, but the lady on the video spoke far too slowly to hold my attention, and there was no way to speed her up. You could read the transcript, which I did, but then you still had to wait for the clips to finish before you could proceed, which is not a good use of time.

It was clear and engaging

The ppt was proficient. I liked having the person speaking and a written summary. it didn't take too long and the test was fair enough

Very good, easy to follow and understand

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

very positive

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Ok not grate

This user gave this course a rating of 4/5 stars

Commonly

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Good Course

Good presentation, stuck to the facts rather than the legislation, would recommend it .

Very informative

Very informative, and very detailed

Well put together and informative

I've done COSHH training before, this course has helped me to stay up to date and given me reminders of legislation and control measures for when new chemicals or other substances are brought into the workplace. Thank you