WRIA’s model is grounded in work-based learning — capability built through a real project in the participant’s own role, addressing a genuine organisational need, and tested through structured reflection. Not abstracted case material; the work itself.
For the modern organisation, capability is no longer taught and then applied. It is developed in the work itself — the principle on which every WRIA programme is built.
Work-based learning treats real work as the curriculum. Development happens inside the participant’s actual role, on a problem their organisation genuinely needs solved — not on a hypothetical case study divorced from consequence.
Conventional training abstracts capability away from the workplace: people are taught in a classroom, then sent back to apply what they can remember. The transfer is rarely complete, and the value is difficult to evidence. Work-based learning closes that gap. Because the learning is the work, there is no transfer step to lose — and the organisation benefits from a real piece of work delivered while the person develops.
This grounding has a long lineage in the practice of work-applied learning, refined over decades and supported by a substantial body of published research. WRIA brings that discipline into a structured method that an organisation can adopt and run for its own people — explained in the formula that follows.
Knowledge, Project, Question and Performance — in one cycle of practice.
The relevant business and management concepts.
A real work-based learning project.
Critical reflection on a workplace problem.
Project, process and learning outcomes.
The natural starting point is the question. Participants begin by interrogating a problem, identify a work-based project (P₁) to address it, then read into the relevant knowledge (K). Armed with that, they return to the project to test whether the explanations hold — and move toward performance outcomes (P₂). The cycle then repeats: with each pass, understanding is refined by more practical experience. Knowledge and practice, as participants discover, go hand in hand.
Participants in every WRIA programme apply the work-based learning (WBL) approach — a disciplined sequence that turns a real workplace challenge into evidenced capability.
Identify a meaningful workplace issue — or an entrepreneurial project of your own.
Address it through a real-life project grounded in your employer’s need — or a market-justified venture — with evidence of approval from your manager or founding group.
Integrate the project with the relevant business and management concepts through a structured project plan, and justify your approach.
Implement and evaluate the project, its process and learning outcomes, and the relevance of the concepts applied.
The WR project develops participants in transition to become work-ready in an authentic, engaging way. As they plan and implement their projects with — or for — their managers and teams, they learn to take initiative and responsibility, empowered to make a difference for themselves and their colleagues as they work with, for, and through others.
The project is built around critical reflection and questioning. In the busyness of work we react quickly and move on; careful thought brings richness to our actions. WRIA uses “reflection” for the practice of questioning, careful thinking and finding insight in what has happened — supported throughout by their line manager’s coaching and WRIA’s central review through the online platform.
The WAL cycle is not run once. With each pass — question, project, knowledge, performance — understanding is refined by more practical experience, and capability deepens. Knowledge and practice, as participants discover, go hand in hand.
See how development is measured through triangulation, and how your organisation can license the model to run it in-house.