GCS · E-SPAR TrainingGhana Civil Service
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Training · 2 Days

Staff Performance Appraisal & the E-SPAR System

A guided, interactive course for officers of your institution — understand how performance is planned, reviewed, scored and rewarded across the appraisal year.

📅 A 2-day training on the Staff Performance Appraisal System & e-SPAR — covering planning, mid-year review and end-of-year assessment.

Organised by the Office of the Head of the Civil Service (OHCS)

3Appraisal phases per year
60/40Targets vs. competencies score
7Core competencies assessed
~25Minutes to complete
🎯

Learn the purpose

Why performance management exists and how it links your daily job to your institution's national mandate.

🗓️

Master the cycle

Planning, mid-year review and end-of-year assessment — what happens, and when.

💻

Use E-SPAR

Navigate the electronic system, understand user roles and avoid common mistakes.

Loyalty · Excellence · Service

Module 1

Introduction & The Bigger Picture

Every target you set begins life as a national priority. Here is how your individual work connects upward to the development agenda of Ghana.

The objective of the Civil & Public Service

To assist Government in the formulation and implementation of policies for the development of the country. In your institution, this means delivering your mandate efficiently and accountably in service of the public.

How your work cascades from the national agenda

National level

National Development Agenda & Sector Medium-Term Development Plans (SMTDP)

Institutional level

Your Institution's Directorate / Division / Unit Action Plans

You

Your individual Job Schedule & agreed appraisal targets

Your targets are not invented in isolation — they are drawn from your unit's action plan and your job description.

Module 2

What is Performance Management?

Performance Management (PM) is not a once-a-year form — it is a continuous, shared process.

Definition

Performance Management is a continuous process by which Managers, Directors, Supervisors and Team Members work together to plan, monitor, review and assess targets that contribute to the overall strategic goals of the organisation — while also developing the knowledge, skills and capacity of staff.

The four continuous actions — tap each card

📝

Plan

Tap to reveal →

Agree focus areas, SMART targets, resources and a learning plan at the start of the year.

👁️

Monitor

Tap to reveal →

Track delivery throughout the year. Supervisor and officer stay in regular contact.

🔄

Review

Tap to reveal →

At mid-year, assess progress honestly and adjust targets, timelines and support.

Assess

Tap to reveal →

At year end, score performance and competencies, then plan development and rewards.

Why it matters — objectives of the PM System

🔍

Transparency & accountability

Increases openness in the delivery of public services.

⚖️

Fair assessment

A reliable, dispassionate means to assess the level and quality of work done.

🧩

Confirm & close gaps

Confirms competencies and identifies capacity gaps for redress.

📈

Continuous improvement

Creates a chance to learn lessons and drive ongoing change.

Module 3

Measurement Tools & Legal Basis

Two instruments measure performance in the Service — the one that applies to you depends on your grade.

① Performance Agreements

Signed by Chief Directors, Heads of Department and Directors / Analogous grades.

Agreements with the Head of the Civil Service / respective Chief Directors, endorsed by Sector Ministers.

② Staff Performance Appraisal

Completed by officers on the grades of Deputy Director / Analogous grades and below.

This is the instrument delivered through E-SPAR — and the focus of this training.

Who signs what — the three tiers

Tier 1

Chief Directors sign agreements with the Head of the Civil Service, endorsed by Sector Ministers.

Tier 2

Heads of Department / Directors & analogous grades sign with their Chief Directors.

Tier 3 — E-SPAR

Deputy Director / analogous grades & below sign the Staff Performance Appraisal Form with their supervisors.

⚖️ The legal foundation

Civil Service Act 1993 (PNDCL 327)

  • Section 7 — Functions of the Head of the Civil Service; ensure general efficiency.
  • Section 88 — Recognition & Award system; awards for meritorious performance (sub-sections 1 & 2).

Public Sector Performance Management Policy

Provides the cross-service framework within which your institution operates its appraisal cycle.

Module 4

The Appraisal Cycle — Three Phases

The appraisal year runs on a clear rhythm. Knowing the timing keeps you compliant and stress-free.

January

1 · Performance Planning

Appraiser and appraisee meet to agree focus areas, SMART targets, resources required, competencies and a learning plan.

July

2 · Mid-Year Review

Progress on each target is honestly assessed. Targets and timelines are adjusted where needed; support is arranged.

December

3 · End-of-Year Assessment

Final scoring of targets (60) and competencies (40) for a total out of 100.

Ongoing

4 · Decision Making

Outcomes feed career development plans, training needs, and the reward & sanction process.

💡 Remember: Outcomes of the mid-year review must be fed back into the targets and timelines — the cycle is a loop, not a straight line.

Inside the Planning Phase — the building blocks

1Focus Areas (FAs)
  • Minimum 2, maximum 3 for Sub-Professional officers.
  • Minimum 3, maximum 5 for Professional officers.
  • Drawn from the Directorate / Unit Action Plan and your job description.
2Targets
  • Minimum 5 targets for Sub-Professional; 6 for Professional officers.
  • Must be SMART — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-framed.
  • Example: “Draft quarterly report submitted to Supervisor by March 2026, June 2026, September 2026 & December 2026.”
3Resources Required
  • Tools needed to deliver, e.g. laptop, printer, photocopier, A4 sheets, software, data.
4Competencies
  • 7 broad competencies with 20 descriptions in total.
  • Assessed separately from targets and worth 40 of the 100 marks.
5Learning Plan
  • Identify the skill / competency gap.
  • State the programme or action (course, workshop, coaching, on-the-job training, webinars, readings).
  • Recommended mode of learning and the date / duration.
Module 5

The Seven Core Competencies

Beyond what you deliver (targets), the system assesses how you work. These seven competencies carry 40 of the 100 marks.

🎓

1 · Professionalism

Technical & supervisory mastery, persistence under difficulty, ownership of results.

🛡️

2 · Integrity

Lives Service values, acts without personal gain, resists undue pressure in decisions.

🧭

3 · Leadership

Proactive strategy, empowers others, drives change and improvement.

🗂️

4 · Organisation & Management

Clear targets, efficient use of time, manages risk, follows up for results.

5 · Maximising Productivity / Decision-Making

Influences events to achieve results, embraces continuous learning, solves problems creatively.

🤝

6 · Teamwork

Collaborates, values others' input, shares credit and accepts joint responsibility.

💬

7 · Communication

Speaks & writes clearly, listens, asks clarifying questions, interprets messages correctly, shares information openly and keeps people informed.

💡 In review: Supervisors note how many descriptions an officer demonstrated, e.g. “demonstrated 2 out of 3,” with concrete remarks and a way forward — never vague phrases.
Module 6

How the End-of-Year Score Works

A total of 100 marks. Targets are worth 60; competencies are worth 40. Drag the slider to see how the two combine.

100out of 100
60 / 60Performance on Targets (Q)
40 / 40Competencies demonstrated
Unscored / gap to 100

How targets are scored

Each target earns marks based on actual delivery. The supervisor records a brief, specific status and the key issues & next steps — vague phrases such as “ongoing” or “target met” are not acceptable.

What happens with the score

It feeds career development (Section 8), formal comments (Sections 9 & 10), and the decision-making phase — reward, sanction, and future training needs & learning plans.

Module 8

The E-SPAR System & User Roles

e-SPAR — the Web-Based Staff Performance Appraisal Reporting System — delivers the whole appraisal online for Deputy Director / analogous grades and below.

Compliance

Ensures participation and adherence to timelines for all eligible officers.

📊

Real-time assessment

Systematically assesses targets & competencies and gives real-time feedback on strengths and weaknesses.

🧠

Data-driven decisions

Guides management on personnel planning, training and development.

Who uses E-SPAR? — eight end-user categories

👔
HR
🧑‍💼
Appraiser
🙋
Appraisee
⚙️
System Administrator
🛠️
IT Support
🏛️
Chief Director
📈
Management
🧭
Director

Explore what each role can do — tap a tab

HR
Appraisee
Appraiser
Director
1
Assign staff to their respective directorates.
2
View all staff details across the institution.
3
Assign directorate heads (directors).
4
Activate staff — directors, appraisers and appraisees.
5
Reset passwords; enable or disable staff accounts.
6
Set up the resources needed to achieve targets.
7
Set up the institution's training needs.
8
View the dashboard — appraisal steps, grade analytics, professional & sub-professional cadre.
1
View bio data.
2
Work the current appraisal stage (Planning, Mid-Year, End-of-Year).
3
Add training plans.
4
See the name of their supervisor.
5
View all stage activities.
6
View dashboard insights — focus areas, targets and appraisal score.
1
View their appraisees.
2
Release appraisees after consultation.
3
Confirm appraisee targets and training plans.
4
View planning-stage activities and approve the appraisal plan.
5
View bio info and work status (appraisee completion rate).
6
See the number of appraisees assigned to them.
1
View bio info.
2
Map staff — supervisors to appraisees.
3
Define focus areas.
4
View officers in the directorate and grade distribution.
5
View staff category and the current appraisal stage.
6
View the overall appraisal status in the directorate.
💡 Must-know etiquette: Supervisors should discuss with appraisees before releasing the portal — this prevents correction overload. Appraisees should always confirm their portal has been released before attempting setup.
Module 7

Why E-SPAR? From Paper to Digital

Before the system went online, appraisals lived on paper — and that came with real, recurring problems. Here's the contrast.

📄 The old manual way — challenges

  • Non-compliance with timelines
  • Late submission of reports by HR managers
  • Complexity in computing scores
  • Limited understanding & appreciation of the instrument
  • Subjectivity in scoring
  • Lack of commitment from supervisors
VS

💻 The E-SPAR way — what changes

  • Timelines tracked & enforced automatically
  • Real-time submission and monitoring
  • Scores computed by the system
  • Guided, user-friendly steps for everyone
  • Structured, transparent scoring
  • Visibility that keeps everyone accountable

11 things you must know about E-SPAR

🔒
Confidentiality is assured
🔑
Unique log-in for all
🚫
No impersonation
😊
User friendliness
📋
Compulsory for all Civil Service staff
🤝
Support for all stakeholders
🌍
Service-wide visibility
⏱️
Real-time monitoring
🔔
Improved notifications
📊
Improved reporting
🔎
Improved auditing
All in one secure platform
Module 9 · Hands-On

Let's Get Our Hands On It

Now the practical part. Open the training portal in a second tab and follow the phases below step by step.

🌐
Training Portal — use this for the practicalohcs-espar.web.app
Open Training Portal ↗

⚠️ Practise here — not on the live system. ohcs-espar.web.app is the safe training portal, so anything you enter is just for practice and won't affect real records. The actual live e-SPAR portal is ohcsgh.web.app — use that only for your real appraisals.

🎯

Before you start

Open the training portal
Work through the phases below at your own pace
🚀 Your practical progress 0%
🎉 Brilliant — you've completed the full practical walkthrough. You're ready for the live portal!

ℹ️ This checklist is just a learning aid — it's saved only in your own browser and doesn't connect to the e-SPAR portal or record anything in the real system.

A clean handout of the full Planning → Mid-Year → End-of-Year journey.

Sample data for the practical

Setting up the Planning phase in the portal has three steps. Use the sample data below as you complete each one.

SMART challenge — fix the vague target

0 / 5 fixed

Read the vague target on the left and picture how you'd sharpen it. Then tap Reveal the SMART fix to check yourself. A SMART target is Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Time-framed — try to score all five!

1 · Core Mandate Delivery
✗ Not SMARTDeliver the directorate's work and report on it.
✓ SMARTDeliver at least 90% of the directorate's 2026 work programme, and report progress to the Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 15 January 2027.

What was added: a measurable threshold (90%), who receives the report and four quarterly deadlines — making it Specific, Measurable and Time-framed.

2 · Human Resource Management & Staff Development
✗ Not SMARTTrain staff and keep HR records.
✓ SMARTPrepare the 2026 training plan, train all scheduled staff, and submit the composite training report to the Director by 31 December 2026.

What was added: a named deliverable (the training plan), full scope (all scheduled staff), the evidence required (composite report) and a deadline.

3 · Information, Records & Data Management
✗ Not SMARTKeep records and the database up to date.
✓ SMARTUpdate and analyse 3,000 records on the database and digitise at least 80% of active files, reporting to the Director by June 2026 and December 2026.

What was added: a measurable count (3,000) and threshold (80% of active files) with dated reporting points.

4 · Stakeholder Engagement & Public Education
✗ Not SMARTEngage stakeholders regularly.
✓ SMARTHold at least 4 sensitisation sessions with staff and stakeholders on the institution's services, and report to the Supervisor each quarter.

What was added: “regularly” became a number (4), with the audience, the topic and quarterly reporting specified.

5 · Corporate Performance, Reporting & Budget
✗ Not SMARTSubmit reports as and when due.
✓ SMARTPrepare the directorate's action plan and submit the Q1, mid-year, Q3 and annual reports to the Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 31 January 2027.

What was added: how many reports, to whom each goes, and the exact deadlines — replacing the unmeasurable “as and when due”.

🧹

Now you try — clean up any target into a SMART one

Paste a draft target — even a vague one. Let AI rewrite it into clear SMART options, or grade and rebuild it yourself with the offline checker.

1 Paste your draft target
📑

My SMART workbook

0 saved

Targets you save here stay on this device. Build your real appraisal plan, then export it to copy, download or print.

    No targets saved yet. Generate or build a target above, then tap Save to workbook.

    1

    Set your targets

    For each focus area, enter its SMART target(s) and the resources required. Open More practice targets under any focus area for extra examples to set up yourself.

    1
    Focus area

    Core Mandate Delivery

    Targets
    • Deliver at least 90% of the directorate's 2026 work programme, and submit a progress report to the Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 15 January 2027.
    • Conduct research on one thematic area relevant to the institution's mandate, and submit findings to the Director by 31 December 2026.
    • Process 4,000 transactions on the relevant operational system and resolve all related complaints, reporting to the Director quarterly.
    • Review and update the directorate/unit operational manual (kept not older than four years), and submit to the Supervisor by 31 December 2026.
    • Carry out monitoring visits to at least 4 units or field areas, and report findings to the Director by June 2026 and December 2026.
    2
    Focus area

    Human Resource Management & Staff Development

    Targets
    • Prepare the directorate's 2026 training plan and ensure all scheduled staff are trained, and submit the composite training report to the Director by 31 December 2026.
    • Maintain up-to-date establishment levels and individual job schedules for all staff in the directorate, and report to the Supervisor by June 2026 and December 2026.
    • File back-to-office reports for every officer who undertakes training within two weeks of return, and send a quarterly summary to the Supervisor.
    • Conduct mid-year and end-of-year appraisals for all supervisees on e-SPAR, and submit the directorate's e-SPAR report to the Director by 31 January 2027.
    • Coordinate the Director's performance agreement and its mid-year and end-of-year reviews, and submit to the Supervisor on schedule.
    3
    Focus area

    Information, Records & Data Management

    Targets
    • Update and analyse 3,000 records on the institution's database, and report to the Director by June 2026 and December 2026.
    • Digitise the directorate's manual records — at least 80% of active files — and report to the Director by December 2026.
    • Manage the institution's website and information systems at no less than 99% uptime, and report incidents to the Supervisor monthly.
    • Back up all directorate data every month, and submit the back-up log to the Supervisor by the 5th working day.
    • Develop and pilot one digital service (e.g. an e-filing or records system), and report go-live to the Director by 31 December 2026.
    4
    Focus area

    Stakeholder Engagement & Public Education

    Targets
    • Hold at least 4 sensitisation sessions with staff and stakeholders on the institution's services and standards, and report to the Supervisor each quarter.
    • Organise one annual stakeholder forum to account on the directorate's performance, and report to the Director by December 2026.
    • Collaborate with at least 2 sister directorates or agencies on shared deliverables, and report outcomes to the Supervisor by December 2026.
    • Respond to all stakeholder queries within 5 working days, and send a monthly summary to the Supervisor.
    • Publish quarterly updates on the directorate's work on the institution's platforms by the 10th working day after each quarter.
    5
    Focus area

    Corporate Performance, Reporting & Budget

    Targets
    • Prepare the directorate's 2026 action plan and submit the first-quarter, mid-year, third-quarter and annual reports to the Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 31 January 2027.
    • Submit quarterly service-delivery reports for the directorate's units in April, July, October and December 2026 to the Supervisor.
    • Submit the end-of-year directorate e-SPAR report to the Director by 31 January 2027.
    • Prepare quarterly budget-implementation reports and submit to the Supervisor by 1 April 2026, 1 July 2026, 1 October 2026 and 1 January 2027.
    • Implement public financial management practices in all directorate activities, and report compliance to the Director by December 2026.
    Resources you'll typically need Laptop Printer Photocopier A4 paper Notepad Pen / pencil
    2

    Accept the default competencies

    The system pre-loads these seven core competencies — review and accept them. Each carries a set of descriptions; at End-of-Year your supervisor records how many you demonstrated (competencies are worth 40 of the 100 marks). The X / Y badges and remarks below are example ratings.

    1

    Professionalism

    3 / 3

    Technical & supervisory mastery · persistence under difficulty · ownership of results.

    Example remark: Consistently delivered to standard and took ownership of results.

    2

    Integrity

    3 / 3

    Lives Service values · acts without personal gain · resists undue pressure in decisions.

    Example remark: Upheld Service values; decisions free of personal interest.

    3

    Leadership

    2 / 3

    Proactive strategy · empowers others · drives change and improvement.

    Example remark: Drove improvements well; can empower the team more. Way forward: delegate stretch tasks.

    4

    Organisation & Management

    2 / 3

    Clear targets · efficient use of time · manages risk · follows up for results.

    Example remark: Met targets and timelines; tighten risk follow-up.

    5

    Maximising Productivity / Decision-Making

    1 / 2

    Influences events to achieve results · embraces continuous learning · solves problems creatively.

    Example remark: Solved problems creatively; pursue more continuous learning.

    6

    Teamwork

    3 / 3

    Collaborates · values others' input · shares credit and accepts joint responsibility.

    Example remark: Collaborated openly and shared credit for results.

    7

    Communication

    2 / 3

    Speaks & writes clearly · listens · asks clarifying questions · interprets messages correctly · shares information openly.

    Example remark: Clear and open; ask more clarifying questions before acting.

    3

    Set your learning plan

    Also called the learning gap identified. For each gap, record the recommended training, the mode of learning and the date / duration.

    Training gap identified
    Google IT Support Professional Certificate
    Recommended trainingContinuous Professional Development Mode of learningOnline Date / duration12 weeks
    Training gap identified
    360° Leadership
    Recommended trainingScheme of Service Training Mode of learningOnline via the Civil Service Training Centre (CSTC) Date / duration5 days
    Training gap identified
    Report Writing & Records Management
    Recommended trainingScheme of Service Training Mode of learningIn-person at the CSTC Date / duration5 days
    Training gap identified
    Data Analytics for Decision-Making
    Recommended trainingContinuous Professional Development Mode of learningOnline Date / duration8 weeks

    Mid-Year review — sample data

    At mid-year the appraisee updates progress on every target, competency and training. The three tabs below mirror the e-SPAR portal exactly — use them as you complete your own mid-year review.

    ✍️ Note on Remarks / Way Forward: although the appraisee types this field, it must read as if written by the appraiser — the supervisor's voice, describing the officer in the third person (e.g. “Officer is on track and reports are filed on time; should tighten backlog follow-up next quarter.”).

    Focus area 1 · Core Mandate Delivery

    TargetStatus of WorkRemarks / Way Forward
    TargetAt least 90% of the directorate's 2026 work programme delivered, with a progress report submitted to Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 15 January 2027.
    Status of WorkQ1 and Q2 activities delivered on schedule; Q1 report submitted on 14 April 2026 and Q2 on 15 July 2026. Half-year delivery stands at 58% of the annual work programme.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer is on track and reports are filed on time. Should sustain the delivery pace and keep the Q3 and Q4 reports to the 15th deadline to close the year above target.
    TargetResearch conducted on one thematic area relevant to the institution's mandate, with findings submitted to the Director by 31 December 2026.
    Status of WorkResearch underway; the thematic area has been scoped and data collection is about 40% complete. Mid-year progress note submitted to the Director in June 2026.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer has made a good start but is still short of the mid-point pace. Should intensify data collection in Q3 and begin drafting early to submit the findings by December 2026.

    Focus area 2 · Human Resource Management & Staff Development

    TargetStatus of WorkRemarks / Way Forward
    TargetThe directorate's 2026 training plan prepared and all scheduled staff trained, with the composite training report submitted to the Director by 31 December 2026.
    Status of WorkTraining plan approved and 14 of 22 scheduled staff trained across Q1 and Q2; back-to-office reports filed for all who returned. Training is broadly on schedule.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer's training coordination is well organised — commendable. Should confirm the remaining staff and schedule sessions early in Q3 so the composite report is ready before December 2026.
    TargetEstablishment levels and individual job schedules kept up to date for all staff in the directorate, with a status report submitted to the Supervisor by June 2026 and December 2026.
    Status of WorkEstablishment levels and job schedules reviewed and updated for all staff with no gaps; mid-year status report submitted to the Supervisor in June 2026.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer's records are complete and accurate — exactly the standard required. Should keep updating promptly as staff move so the year-end report is straightforward.

    Focus area 3 · Information, Records & Data Management

    TargetStatus of WorkRemarks / Way Forward
    Target3,000 records updated and analysed on the institution's database, with a status report submitted to the Director by June 2026 and December 2026.
    Status of WorkAbout 1,650 records updated and analysed so far. Mid-year status report submitted to the Director in June 2026.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer has achieved strong coverage at mid-year. Should keep the update pace steady through Q3 and Q4 so the full 3,000 records are completed and analysed by year end.
    TargetThe directorate's manual records digitised, with at least 80% of active files captured and reported to the Director by December 2026.
    Status of WorkDigitisation in progress; 55% of active files captured onto the records system to date.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer is making reasonable progress, but the pace must pick up to reach 80% by December 2026. Should prioritise the active-file backlog in Q3 and request data-entry support if needed.

    Focus area 4 · Stakeholder Engagement & Public Education

    TargetStatus of WorkRemarks / Way Forward
    TargetAt least four (4) sensitisation sessions on the institution's services and standards held with staff and stakeholders, with reports submitted to Supervisor by March 2026, June 2026, September 2026 and December 2026.
    Status of WorkTwo (2) sessions held so far — Q1 with staff and Q2 with external stakeholders; reports submitted for both quarters.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer is on schedule for the four-session target. Should ensure the Q3 and Q4 sessions reach the remaining stakeholder groups and document attendance for the record.
    TargetAnnual stakeholder forum organised to account on the directorate's performance, with a report submitted to the Director by December 2026.
    Status of WorkPlanning begun; venue and date proposed and stakeholder list drafted. Forum scheduled for the fourth quarter.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer has done good early planning. Should confirm the date and send invitations by the end of Q3 so the forum holds well before the December 2026 deadline.

    Focus area 5 · Corporate Performance, Reporting & Budget

    TargetStatus of WorkRemarks / Way Forward
    TargetThe directorate's 2026 action plan prepared, and the first-quarter, mid-year, third-quarter and annual performance reports submitted to the Supervisor by 15 April 2026, 15 July 2026, 15 October 2026 and 31 January 2027.
    Status of Work2026 action plan prepared at planning; the Q1 and mid-year performance reports drafted and submitted to the Supervisor by the 15 April 2026 and 15 July 2026 deadlines.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer's quarterly reporting is consistent and timely. Should maintain this through Q3 and Q4 and begin consolidating early for the annual report due in January 2027.
    TargetQuarterly service-delivery reports for the directorate's units submitted to the Supervisor in April, July, October and December 2026.
    Status of WorkQ1 and Q2 service-delivery reports for the directorate's units prepared and submitted to the Supervisor in April and July 2026.
    Remarks / Way ForwardOfficer's unit service-delivery reporting is consistent and on time. Should keep the Q3 and Q4 reports to schedule and cover every unit.
    CompetencyProgressRemarks
    CompetencyProfessionalism
    ProgressOfficer consistently meets standards and takes ownership of assigned work.
    RemarksOfficer shows sound professionalism; should continue modelling the standard and mentoring junior staff.
    CompetencyIntegrity
    ProgressOfficer's decisions are transparent and free of personal interest, especially in handling staff and records matters.
    RemarksOfficer's integrity is evident in the handling of cases; should maintain this standard in all dealings.
    CompetencyLeadership
    ProgressOfficer coordinates the unit's work well and is growing steadily in delegation.
    RemarksOfficer's leadership is developing well; should delegate more stretch tasks to build the team's capacity.
    CompetencyOrganisation & Management
    ProgressOfficer keeps targets and timelines largely on track and uses time well.
    RemarksOfficer is well organised; should tighten risk follow-up so deadlines hold even under pressure.
    CompetencyMaximising Productivity / Decision-Making
    ProgressOfficer solves operational problems promptly and has kept output steady through Q1 and Q2.
    RemarksOfficer is productive and resourceful; should pursue continuous learning to sharpen decision-making further.
    CompetencyTeamwork
    ProgressOfficer collaborates openly and supports colleagues across the unit.
    RemarksOfficer is a reliable team player; should keep sharing credit and drawing in the quieter members.
    CompetencyCommunication
    ProgressOfficer communicates clearly in writing and in meetings.
    RemarksOfficer is clear and timely; should ask a few more clarifying questions before acting on instructions.
    Programme / Recommended TrainingMode of LearningDate / DurationCompetency skills demonstrated after learning
    Programme / Recommended TrainingGoogle IT Support Professional Certificate
    Mode of LearningOnline (CPD)
    Date / Duration12 weeks · Feb–Apr
    Skills demonstrated after learningCompleted — now providing first-line IT support and managing the records system with more confidence.
    Programme / Recommended Training360° Leadership
    Mode of LearningOnline via the CSTC
    Date / Duration5 days · May 2026
    Skills demonstrated after learningCompleted — applying delegation and feedback techniques in supervising the unit.
    Programme / Recommended TrainingReport Writing & Records Management
    Mode of LearningIn-person at the CSTC
    Date / Duration5 days · scheduled Q3
    Skills demonstrated after learningNot yet undertaken — scheduled for the third quarter.
    Programme / Recommended TrainingData Analytics for Decision-Making
    Mode of LearningOnline (CPD)
    Date / Duration8 weeks · in progress
    Skills demonstrated after learningIn progress (week 4 of 8) — beginning to use data summaries in the quarterly reports.

    End-of-Year assessment — sample data

    The final stage. The appraisee completes a self-assessment; the appraiser then scores performance on targets (60) and competencies (40), comments on overall performance and updates career development; finally the appraisee logs back in to respond. The six tabs mirror the e-SPAR portal.

    ⭐ Total Score: 89.0 Performance on targets (Q) 54.0 / 60 · Competencies (C) 35.0 / 40 = 89 / 100

    👤 Completed by the appraisee. Both Target Assessment and General Assessment must be completed and submitted before the supervisor can access the appraisal.

    1 · Target Assessment

    TargetSelf-score
    TargetAt least 90% of the 2026 work programme delivered; reports by the 15th.
    Self-score6.0
    TargetResearch on one thematic area completed and submitted.
    Self-score5.0
    Target2026 training plan prepared and all scheduled staff trained.
    Self-score6.0
    TargetEstablishment levels & job schedules kept up to date.
    Self-score6.0
    Target3,000 records updated & analysed on the database.
    Self-score5.5
    TargetManual records digitised — ≥ 80% of active files.
    Self-score5.5
    TargetFour sensitisation sessions held.
    Self-score6.0
    TargetAnnual stakeholder forum organised.
    Self-score5.0
    TargetQuarterly + annual performance reports submitted.
    Self-score6.0
    TargetQuarterly service-delivery reports for the units submitted.
    Self-score5.5
    Total (self-rated)
    56.5 / 60

    2 · General Assessment

    1. On a scale of 1–5, how would you rate your performance during the year?

    4 / 5

    1b. Give two (2) reasons for the rating selected.

    I met or exceeded most of my targets, including delivering more than 90% of the work programme on schedule and training all scheduled staff.
    I kept the establishment records and job schedules accurate and complete, and completed professional trainings that improved my output.

    2. Indicate any extra work you accomplished in addition to your agreed targets.

    Drafted a unit operational manual ahead of schedule and trained a national service person on the records system.

    3. Which Focus / Work Area did you find most difficult to achieve, and why?

    Information, Records & Data Management — digitising the manual backlog was time-consuming with limited data-entry support.

    4. Briefly describe how the training completed / undertaken impacted your work output and the Institution.

    The IT Support and Data Analytics courses sped up record digitisation and improved the quality of the quarterly reports submitted to management.

    🧑‍💼 Completed by the appraiser after the self-assessment is submitted. Performance on targets is worth 60 marks (Q).

    TargetPerformance AssessmentScore AwardedSummary of Key Issues Identified & Next Step
    TargetAt least 90% of the 2026 work programme delivered; reports by the 15th.
    Performance AssessmentAll four quarterly milestones delivered and reports filed on time; annual work programme exceeded.
    Score Awarded5.5
    Key Issues & Next StepExcellent delivery of the work programme — set a higher stretch target next year.
    TargetResearch on one thematic area completed and submitted.
    Performance AssessmentResearch completed and findings submitted, though two weeks after the December deadline.
    Score Awarded4.5
    Key Issues & Next StepSound research; start earlier next year to meet the submission deadline.
    Target2026 training plan prepared and all scheduled staff trained.
    Performance AssessmentTraining plan delivered in full; all scheduled staff trained and the composite report submitted.
    Score Awarded6.0
    Key Issues & Next StepExemplary delivery — maintain the standard.
    TargetEstablishment levels & job schedules kept up to date.
    Performance AssessmentRecords kept complete and accurate all year and reported on time.
    Score Awarded6.0
    Key Issues & Next StepStandard-setting record-keeping; sustain it.
    Target3,000 records updated & analysed on the database.
    Performance AssessmentAll 3,000 records updated and analysed on the database.
    Score Awarded5.5
    Key Issues & Next StepFull coverage achieved; keep entries up to date.
    TargetManual records digitised — ≥ 80% of active files.
    Performance Assessment78% of active files digitised — marginally below the 80% target.
    Score Awarded5.0
    Key Issues & Next StepStrong effort; clear the backlog in Q1 next year.
    TargetFour sensitisation sessions held.
    Performance AssessmentAll four sensitisation sessions held with documented attendance.
    Score Awarded5.5
    Key Issues & Next StepWell delivered; widen reach to the remaining stakeholder groups.
    TargetAnnual stakeholder forum organised.
    Performance AssessmentAnnual stakeholder forum held and reported to the Director.
    Score Awarded5.0
    Key Issues & Next StepGood engagement; plan and confirm earlier next year.
    TargetQuarterly + annual performance reports submitted.
    Performance AssessmentAll quarterly reports and the annual report submitted on time.
    Score Awarded5.5
    Key Issues & Next StepConsistent, quality reporting; maintain it.
    TargetQuarterly service-delivery reports for the units submitted.
    Performance AssessmentAll four quarterly service-delivery reports for the units submitted to the Supervisor on time.
    Score Awarded5.5
    Key Issues & Next StepConsistent unit reporting; keep full coverage of all units.
    Total (Q)
    54.0 / 60

    🧑‍💼 Completed by the appraiser. Up to 2 marks per sub-competency demonstrated; the 20 descriptions across the 7 competencies total 40 marks (C).

    CompetencyScore Awarded
    CompetencyProfessionalism
    Score Awarded6.0
    CompetencyIntegrity
    Score Awarded6.0
    CompetencyLeadership
    Score Awarded4.0
    CompetencyOrganisation & Management
    Score Awarded5.0
    CompetencyMaximising Productivity / Decision-Making
    Score Awarded4.0
    CompetencyTeamwork
    Score Awarded5.0
    CompetencyCommunication
    Score Awarded5.0
    Total (C)
    35.0 / 40
    Appraiser's comment on overall performanceA dependable, results-oriented officer who delivered strongly across the work programme, staff training and accountability — with complete, accurate establishment records throughout the year. Records digitisation fell marginally short of target and should be completed early in the new year. Conduct, integrity and teamwork were commendable. Overall, a very good year's performance.

    🧑‍💼 Completed by the appraiser — capacity built during the year, plus training recommendations for the year ahead.

    ProgrammeInstitutionDate / DurationCompetency skills demonstrated after training
    ProgrammeGoogle IT Support Professional Certificate
    InstitutionCoursera (online, CPD)
    Date / Duration12 weeks · Feb–Apr
    Skills demonstrated after trainingProvides first-line IT support and manages the records system independently.
    Programme360° Leadership
    InstitutionCivil Service Training Centre (CSTC)
    Date / Duration5 days · May 2026
    Skills demonstrated after trainingApplies delegation and structured feedback in supervising the unit.
    ProgrammeReport Writing & Records Management
    InstitutionCivil Service Training Centre (CSTC)
    Date / Duration5 days · September 2026
    Skills demonstrated after trainingImproved the structure, accuracy and clarity of official reports.
    ProgrammeData Analytics for Decision-Making
    InstitutionOnline (CPD)
    Date / Duration8 weeks · Sep–Nov
    Skills demonstrated after trainingUses data summaries to strengthen quarterly reporting and decisions.
    Training & Development — comments on future training needsRecommend Advanced Records & Information Management and a customer-service excellence course in the year ahead. A supervisory-leadership refresher would further strengthen management capacity.

    👤 After the appraiser submits, the appraisee logs back in, reviews the scores and the appraiser's comments, then states whether they agree with how they have been assessed.

    Appraisee's commentI have reviewed my scores and my supervisor's comments and I am in agreement with the assessment. I am grateful for the recognition of my work on the work programme and staff training, and I accept the observation on records digitisation, which I will prioritise and complete in the first quarter of the coming year. I welcome the recommended trainings and look forward to undertaking them.
    0

    Setup — HR & Director

    1
    Assign staff to directorates

    HR assigns each officer to their respective directorate.

    HR
    2
    Activate staff

    HR activates all staff — directors, appraisers and appraisees.

    HR
    3
    Assign directors

    HR assigns a director to each directorate.

    HR
    4
    Set up training & resources

    HR adds all trainings and resources required to achieve targets.

    HR
    5
    Map appraisers to appraisees

    Directors map supervisors to their appraisee(s).

    Director
    6
    Set focus areas

    Directors define the focus areas for the directorate.

    Director
    1

    Planning Phase

    1
    Release the portal

    After discussion, the supervisor releases the portal for the appraisee.

    Supervisor
    2
    Set up the planning phase

    Appraisee logs in, sets up planning & trainings, then submits to the supervisor.

    Appraisee
    3
    Review & approve

    Supervisor reads through the planning phase and approves it.

    Supervisor
    2

    Mid-Year Review Phase

    1
    Portal release

    Supervisor discusses with the appraisee and releases the portal.

    Supervisor
    2
    Target review

    Appraisee reviews each target, competency and training.

    Appraisee
    3
    Detailed reviews

    Appraisee provides a further detailed review of each target.

    Appraisee
    3

    End-of-Year Phase

    1
    Portal release

    Supervisor discusses with the appraisee and releases the portal.

    Supervisor
    2
    Self-assessment

    Appraisee assesses themselves and submits to the supervisor.

    Appraisee
    3
    Supervisor's assessment

    Supervisor assesses performance, ratings & comments, then approves.

    Supervisor
    💡 Note the following: Appraisees make their final comments and save. Supervisors can view those comments on their portal. Importantly, the appraisee can state whether they agree with the appraiser's scores — the system keeps the conversation two-way.
    Module 10

    Why It Matters & Golden Rules

    A well-run appraisal cycle changes the culture of an institution. Here is the payoff — and how to get it right.

    🌟

    Better work attitude & image

    PM has positively influenced work attitude and improved the public image of the Service.

    ⏱️

    Attendance & productivity

    Improves attendance and the productivity of officers.

    📌

    Clear responsibilities

    Helps officers know their duties and responsibilities.

    🔗

    Sense of contribution

    Shows officers how they contribute to organisational objectives.

    🏆 Five golden rules to live by

    • Ensure timely completion of all phases of the appraisal process.
    • Make every target SMART for the reporting year.
    • Always meet with your supervisor during all three phases.
    • Feed mid-year outcomes back into the review of targets and timelines.
    • Keep records specific and honest — never use vague phrases like “ongoing.”

    Loyalty · Excellence · Service

    Knowledge Check

    Test What You've Learned

    Answer all eight questions. You need 6 out of 8 to pass and complete the training.

    0/8