Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Workplace Relations
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Submission 25
Denis Whitfield
SUBMISSION TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STANDING COMMITTEE ON EMPLOYMENT,
EDUCATION AND TRAINING
23 October, 1997
While I believe that at some time in the future the reverse may be true,
(it is interesting to note the introduction at the University of Sydney
of an undergraduate degree as a pre requisite to enrolment in medicine
and more recently the intention to offer a four year degree in liberal
arts) what seems to be generally thought to be most important for universities
is to offer specialist or vocational education (ne training). But,
mostly, school leavers do not know what they want as a career, are unsure
what work will be available to them on graduation, want time to make up
their minds, seek flexibility in course structure, and need opportunity
to change direction. This assertion is supported by the Sydney Morning
Herald of 25th and 26th Feb which quotes two recent reports on university
eduction as saying that students leaving high school and entering university
are often ill prepared to make decisions about their future careers.
In addition, shortcomings of having (only) a specialist education include
a reduced capacity to accommodate change and a restricted ability to think
outside of the paradigms established by the discipline. As well, there
is always the real chance that you simply get to study in the wrong specialisation
- the one that disappears as a career prospect just as the period of study
draws to an end.
The irony is that for new university students ill prepared to make decisions
about their careers, the least useful offerings are vocational courses.
What is more useful for the new university student (and to humanity in
general I believe) is encouragement to pursue a good general eduction
(not training) that prepares them to make an informed choice about the
direction (I'm not sure about the term career any more) they would like
their working lives to take. As importantly - for us all I believe - a
general education helps to establish an understanding of the place our
own small contribution has in the history of civilisation. For many students,
what they know best when they leave school is what they don't want
to pursue at University.
Generally, I am inclined to the notion that Universities should still
be first responsible for the provision of general education. It is
probably the case that most university entrants know what they are not
interested in and so I have sometimes thought that universities should
offer only four degrees at the undergraduate level - a Bachelor of
Science for students who want their futures in mathematics, physics and
chemistry, a Bachelor of Human and Environmental Studies for those who
wish to work somewhere in human or animal medicine, in psychology, in
ecological science and so on, a Bachelor of Arts for students who have
a love for history, literature, and the social sciences, and a Bachelor
of Creative Arts for students who will become our writers, performers
and visual artists. In this higher education model, graduates from
these general education courses would then move into more specific post
graduate training courses offered by universities (perhaps) or by other
specialist training institutions such as TAFE.
What I am arguing is the value of a good generalist education. On the
other hand, it is naive not also to be pragmatic in a university and broader
community that holds corporatism and pragmatism as paradigms for decision
making. In addition, it is clear that for a number of students
leaving school and for others who are graduates of more general education
courses, we need to have quite specific vocational training opportunities.
I believe that the first role of Institutes of Technical and Further
Education should be to provide training.
In terms of aim, content, pedagogical style, and outcome, one can distinguish
between education and training. In the past, Universities have felt comfortable
about providing an education and, by and large, left training to guilds,
employers, private enterprise, and to the TAFE sector.
I strongly recommend that the role of universities and Institutes
of Technical and Further Education be kept quite separate with the
TAFE sector being responsible for the provision of quality training rather
than of general education. I can see a restructured TAFE sector even providing
training in medicine for instance. Universities should concentrate
on the provision of education and be the centres for research that
leads to the generation of new knowledge, the advancement of technology,
and the development of our understanding of civilisation.
Something that we must avoid is the relegation (consciously or not)
of one sector to a lower position of funding or importance than another.
Both education and research (that I argue Universities should be principally
involved in) and training (which I argue TAFE should be doing) are necessary
but must be seen by the community as equal in value - the only difference
is what the sectors do. My fear is that (more likely) the TAFE sector
will aspire to being more like universities. This has clearly happened
before and I think it will be to the detriment of the community if it
continues to the point that TAFE and Universities are doing the same things
with different levels of understanding, expertise, commitment, and sense
of purpose.
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