How to present your evidence Sample Clauses
How to present your evidence. It is important that the appeal panel can understand the principal points of your appeal. ● Try to organise your appeal by submitting evidence for each factor on separate pages. If you are not sure of the factor, submit the evidence anyway and the appeal panel will sort it out, referring back to you where necessary. ● If you can, refer to levels in the Green Book, for example - "My evaluation is at level 2 on this factor and I think I should be considered for level 3" followed by the evidence to support this statement. ● Describe the task, which forms the basis of your evidence. Make sure that, where relevant, you include information on the time taken to complete an activity. How often you have to do it? Who are your contacts? Who gives you work? What is the size of your budget? How many people do you supervise? ● Provide information as briefly as possible – one good example will do the work of 3 or 4 poor examples. ● You can quote descriptions from the Green Book, but these must be accompanied by the description of the tasks within your job to which you think they refer. ● If you use a comparator you must provide evidence that you undertake the same or similar work at the same level as the comparator you have chosen.
