Tam Farms · Article 16

How is a Tam Farms program designed and certified?

Every program in Tam Farms goes through a structured design and certification process — not an ad hoc idea.

A Tam Farms program is not opened simply because there is demand. It must go through a structured design and certification process, ensuring clear goals, assessed safety, and verifiable outcomes. This article describes that process.

1. Goals

Each program begins with a specific goal: what will participants achieve after completing it? The goal must be measurable or observable — not a vague slogan.

2. Target group

The program must clearly define its target group: age, life stage, personal conditions. Not everyone is suited to every program — and that is stated clearly from the start.

3. Participation conditions

The program must list participation conditions: required skills, equipment to bring, compatible health status. People who do not meet the conditions are screened before confirmation.

4. Program and experience map

The program must have a detailed experience map: activities by week, by day, milestones, independent work time, and accompanied time. The map is shared with participants before starting.

5. Facilitator

Each program must designate a facilitator — someone with relevant expertise, recognized under the expert standard. The facilitator is responsible for coordination and evaluation.

6. Outcomes

The program must define specific outcomes: a product, a report, a portfolio, a plan, or a journal. Outcomes must be storable and presentable.

7. Evidence

All outcomes must have evidence: files, photos, manuscripts, notes. Evidence is stored according to the privacy policy and may be requested again during audits.

8. Feedback

After each program, participants provide structured feedback. Feedback is used to improve the program in the next version.

9. Safety

Each program must have a safety assessment: physical, psychological, and environmental risks. If the program involves outdoor activities or tools, there must be instruction and response procedures.

10. Consent

Participants must sign a consent form before starting — confirming they understand the goals, conditions, risks, and scope of responsibility.

11. Pricing and refunds

Program pricing must be clearly published. The refund policy must be in writing: how much is refunded, within what timeframe, under what conditions. No hidden clauses.

12. Quality assurance (QA)

Programs are evaluated periodically for QA: participant outcomes, feedback, completion rate, alignment with the original goals. If QA does not pass, the program is suspended for fixes.

13. Version history

Each program has a version history: what changed, when, and why. The history is stored for retrieval when needed.

A good program is not a perfect program — but one with a clear certification process and a willingness to fix what needs fixing.

Explore the programs

See the programs currently open and their participation conditions.

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Content is orientational and introduces the model. Not medical, psychological, legal, or investment advice. No guarantee of employment, income, housing, or personal outcomes.

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Language: Tiếng Việt