House of Representatives Committees

Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Workplace Relations

Inquiry into the Role of Institutes of TAFE
Submissions

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Submission 17

THE AUSTRALIAN ACADEMY OF THE HUMANITIES INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER

 

Dear Mr McMahon

INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION

In response to the Committee's invitation of 17 September 1997, this Academy provides the enclosed written submission on the above topic.

As the Committee may be aware, the Australian Academy of the Humanities has recently submitted to the Australian Research Council a Strategic Disciplinary Review on Research and Research Training in the Humanities. Our Strategic Review contains further information on the role of a university with reference to the Humanities. In particular the essay on The Idea of a University addresses what a university is and gives indications of where the lines of demarcation might fall.

If you require any further information please contact me.

Yours sincerely

Dr David H Bennett

Executive Director

22 October, 1997

 

INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION

Submission by the Australian Academy of the Humanities

to the

House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training

Introduction

The Australian Academy of the Humanities' Royal Charter states, "The objects and the purposes for which the Academy is hereby constituted are the advancement of scholarship and of interest in and understanding of the Humanities... and for that purpose (a) To advance knowledge of the Humanities." Our concern for the Humanities extends to all levels of education and extends to Humanities courses in institutes of technical and further education as well as universities.

Distinctions and Similarities

The distinctions and similarities that can be made regarding the roles of institutes of technical and further education (TAFEs) and the roles of universities are of kind and degree, but do not provide a sharp line of demarcation. Primarily this is because TAFEs and universities both provide tertiary education and because both provide a range of overlapping courses and topics.

If there was ever a sharp line of demarcation, the amalgamations of the late 1980s and early 1990s blurred it. The abolition of the binary system and the establishment of the unified national system overlapped the roles of TAFEs and universities to a greater extent than ever before. For example, this policy resulted in a number of colleges of advanced education, institutes of technology, or other institutes of technical and further education amalgamating with universities (eg, Roseworthy Agricultural College becoming a campus of the University of Adelaide) or converting these institutions into new universities (eg, Canberra College of Advanced Education [CCAE] became the University of Canberra).

Despite the overlap blurring the distinctions in the roles of universities and TAFEs, distinctions can be made, particularly distinctions of degree. Starting with an overall characterisation of the role of universities, the Australian Vice-Chancellors' Committee (AVCC) makes the following generic statements about Australian universities.

1. The role of Australia's universities is the creation, preservation and transmission of knowledge.

2. Besides undergraduate teaching, the universities' roles include research, postgraduate education, consultancy and the provision of expert advice and comment on issues of national and international importance.

3. Australia has a unified national system of universities, of which diversity and autonomy are central features. Each institution has the freedom to specify its own mission and purpose, modes of teaching and research, constitution of the student body and the range of educational programs. (AVCC WWW Home Page, numbers added)

Point 1, universities and TAFEs share the roles of preservation and transmission of knowledge, but universities either distinctly or to a greater degree create knowledge. If the creation of knowledge is a product of research, universities have a greater role in research than TAFEs, if for no other reason, than that universities have a broader range of research areas, the strongest defining feature of university research is its diversity of form and outcome.

Point 2, universities and TAFEs share the role of undergraduate teaching (nevertheless, even within the realm of undergraduate teaching distinctions can be made as indicated in point 3), but postgraduate education is predominantly a role of universities. Postgraduate education involves providing supervision to appropriate standards, a conducive research environment, and research infrastructure. Few, if any, TAFEs are equipped to provide this combination of qualities.

Point 3, the diversity and autonomy of universities is greater than TAFEs, although the mergers greatly eroded the autonomy of the pre-1987 universities. Among other reasons, this is because, in the words of Department of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs (DEETYA):

While it is the case that international students attend TAFEs, the international standing of Australian higher education is founded on its universities. The provision of education in "professional and academic fields" is the role of universities, whereas, the mission statements of TAFEs, for example the Hobart Institute of Technical and Further Education (HIT), are more oriented to vocational education and training:

The role of universities is to provide the bulk of education in "professional and academic fields", while the role of TAFEs is to provide the bulk of education in "vocational education and training".

The level of certification between TAFEs and universities illustrates another difference of degree. TAFEs normally provide certificates and diplomas, whereas universities provide diplomas and degrees, including postgraduate degrees. Even this distinction at the undergraduate level is becoming blurred, at least some TAFEs are moving in the direction of awarding diplomas. Flinders Street TAFE in Adelaide is offering degrees to Honours level in a variety of musical fields.

Taken together these last two points make an important assertion about the appropriate role of institutes of technical and further education. They meet an important and significant need to provide "vocational education and training" at the appropriate level and duration. Many students neither want nor require the types or range of proficiencies taught by universities nor to spend the time normally required to obtain a degree. This difference is brought out in Arvid Petersen's (Managing Director, Education and Training Australia Pty Limited) submission to the Review of Higher Education Funding and Policy:

The last point brings out a significant contrast between the roles of universities and institutions of technical and further education. TAFEs are often channels or training grounds for entry into universities, as in the example of HIT, whereas the reverse is not the case, although a student who has completed a university degree may attend a TAFE.

In turn, this highlights another contrast between TAFEs and universities. The type of study is different. If, among other things, TAFEs are channels into university, then credit transfers from TAFEs to universities would make no more sense than credit transfers from secondary level institutions to university would and for the same reasons. At best, credit transfers in either direction would have to be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Nevertheless, now, more than ever before, opportunities exist for increasing collaboration between universities and TAFEs. Articulation between the two sectors is a fact of life in the 1990s, and present indicators suggest that this will grow markedly over the next few years. We must remember that articulation is a two-way street:

This trend can only be seen as a positive development for both universities and TAFEs. In the current changing fiscal and operational environment for higher education in Australia and overseas, the sharing of resources and skills can only benefit our students.

Furthermore, this trend is matched by the development of courses in universities that are increasingly seen as 'vocational', as opposed to purely 'scholastic', in nature. Again, this must be seen as a positive step, since it cannot help but dissolve the false dichotomy between teaching and scholarship.

There will always be a place for the kind of education, however defined, provided best by TAFEs, but the demarcation between TAFEs and universities is no longer a clear border, but rather overlapping areas of influence.'

Concluding points

In conclusion, we make the following points:

Dr David H Bennett

Executive Director

Australian Academy of the Humanities

22 October, 1997

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