Hi,
validation of work history: Look at the first section; the purpose is to validate employment history, etc.. The person who completes such a document is called "referee". And yes, it is like a summary of your CV. That's the whole point. Why should anyone believe what you write in your CV??? Ask you boss to list it, or get them to write an additional reference letter.
A professional referee does not have to complete any form. It is the person, that they might call to get verbal information about you. One of the two professional referees needs to be a Physio.
It is up to you, who you choose for which task and whether or not, you choose your professional referee to also complete the validation of work history.
to 3.) Conditions treated is neccessary, as you might use e.g. a rotation in Care for the Elderly for competencies in neuro. Now, unless your boss has stated, that indeed you were seeing neurological conditions there, it is not valid.
See the whole point of a work validation is to show that what you say is what you've done. It's called face value rather than lip-service.
Letter of good standing needs to be no less than 3 months old. I got mine just before I had my application package complete.
Case studies: There is two things. 1) actual case studies, done as real in-services, including all details/ references/etc. 2) some made up retrospectively, either based on real clients or on imaginary scenarios, who cares. The latter ones, I would put under reflective practice/ learning. The point is to show evidence of clinical reasoning.
Most of this I got from my own communication with the board and from the applications, some of my colleagues have shown to me. So, for all of us, it worked.
Just think that the whole point of your application is to prove the 10 competencies and that every statement you make needs to have some evidence to prove it. it is a lot of work, but not impossible. as they said before, keep it simple.
Hope this helps, cheers,
Fyzzio