Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Workplace Relations
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Submission 93
5 January 1998
ACUADS
The Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools
INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF
INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
Thank you for inviting the Australian Council of University
Art and Design Schools (ACUADS) to make a submission to the timely Inquiry
into the Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education.
As Professor David Williams indicated in his letter to you (10 November
1997), the Inquiry was discussed by the Executive at its meeting held
on 15 December 1997, and my comments below reflect views expressed at
the meeting.
Australian tertiary professional education in art and
design is offered by both TAFE institutes and the universities. The programs
of study offered by universities and TAFE are distinctive in pedagogy,
in their emphases on conceptual and practical skills, and in the assumed
vocational/professional destinations of graduates. Australian artists,
craftspractitioners and designers are well-served by the diversity of
courses available in the higher education sector. ACUADS supports the
view that the distinctive differences which characterise university undergraduate
courses and TAFE courses should be retained in the best interests of meeting
the needs of the discipline and its industry applications.
In art and design, there are significant numbers of practitioners
who take both university degrees and TAFE diplomas in the course of their
training and on-going professional practice. TAFE courses are seen to
offer a specific vocational training in skills and techniques, both at
a post-secondary level and at an advanced level for practitioners seekin-
to up-rade skills or acquire new skills and techniques. Students undertaking
undergraduate degrees in university art and design schools are offered
a greater focus on the conceptual aspects of the practices of art and
design. This stronger conceptual education is evidenced in both the history/theory
and the studio components of the courses.
A number of university graduates will, at some point
in their careers, take TAFE courses to further hone their skills, to develop
specific techniques or to work with new materials. More generally, however,
the traffic goes in the other direction, with TAFE diplomates seeking
entry into university undergraduate programs. This raises issues of articulation,
advanced standing and credit transfers. To date, articulation arrangements
have been negotiated on an institution-to-institution basis and advanced
standing and credit transfers have frequently been granted on individual
case-by-case basis. (In general, TAFE diplomates are granted advanced
standing in studio subjects and-to a lesser extent-in history/theory subjects.).
For most undergraduate courses in university art and design schools, student
selection procedures place strong emphasis on case-by-case examination
of an applicant's suitability assessed through the extensive use of interviews
and/or portfolios, as well as results achieved in the final year at secondary
school. In general, TAFE diplomates are not offered automatic entry but
submit to the same selection procedures as other comparable applicants.
ACUADS support the goal of developing a national credit
transfer scheme with recommendations on the minimum levels of credit which
universities should grant for students entering undergraduate degree courses
with completed TAFE qualifications. To this end, ACUADS is an active participant
in the Australian Vice Chancellor's Committee Credit Transfer project
and proposes to utilise the project to actively promote and publicise
improved flexibility and clearly stated articulation arrangements and
study pathways available for students in art and design.
Currently, there is a range of institutional patterns
in the relationship of TAFE and university sectors. In some instances,
TAFE and university sectors co-exist on a single campus, or in a single
faculty. More frequently, TAFE institutes and universities are separate
entities, but collaboration and collegial relations are evidenced by the
sharing of facilities, participation in course accreditation and review
processes, and professional links in the art and design industries.
In conclusion, ACUADS strongly endorses the retention
of the distinctive character of TAFE education vis-a-vis university education,
and supports the development of a systematic approach to articulation
and credit transfer between TAFE and university courses in art and design.
If I can be of any further assistance to the Committee, please contact
me (contact details are given below).
Professor Sue Rowley
Chair
Australian Council of Universities Art and Design Schools
c/- UNSW College of Fine Arts, PO Box 259, Paddington NSW 2021
Phone: 02.9385.0691 w; 0414.840978 mobile - Fax: 02.9385.0615 or 02.4285.2372
Email: S.Rowley@unsw.edu.au
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