Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Workplace Relations
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Submission 30
Barton institute of TAFE
INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER
EDUCATION
Please find attached excerpts from the Executive Summary of Barton's
Response to the Victorian Government's Ministerial Review of Provision
of TAFE in Melbourne Metropolitan area.
This summary addresses both the terms of reference of the House of Representatives
Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training Inquiry namely:
- The appropriate roles of Institutes of TAFE; and
- The extent to which these roles should overlap with universities.
Barton is a TAFE Institute in south-east metropolitan Melbourne. It provides
vocational and education training programs to the Automotive, Manufacturing,
Food Processing, Business Management, Hospitality and Community Services
sectors.
Barton's annual turnover is approx $43m, 60% of which is direct government
funding allocation. The remainder is generated through tendering for government
funding, and fee for-service consultancies, both in Australia and overseas.
The Institute has 17,000 students enrolled including a growing number
of international fee- paying students, and delivers programs to school
leavers, apprentices, entry-level operators, as well as a range of Certificates
leading to Diplomas and Advanced Diplomas.
The Institute employs approximately 800 staff who works from two suburban
campuses as well as in workplaces throughout metropolitan Melbourne and
country Victoria. Currently a number of staff are working overseas on
short and longer term projects in Mauritius, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia
and Vietnam.
The Institute has articulation arrangements in place with Deakin University,
Monash University, University of Melbourne and Victoria University of
Technology and RMIT. The Institute also enters into co-operative alliances
with high education, private providers and industry in research and projects.
Barton believes the primary role of Institutes of TAFE is in meeting
the diverse human resource development needs of industry and the community.
Co-operative arrangements with Universities enable articulation for these
customers seeking further study, partnerships with Universities, TAFE
Training Institutes broadening the understanding of the needs of Australian
industry and how best to meet their needs.
Yours sincerely
COLIN GRISS
Director and CEO
Att.
Maximising efficiency, competition and customer-choice
Barton Institute of TAFE recognises the challenges ahead for the
TAFE Institutes in the Melbourne -metropolitan area in delivering seamless,
flexible and customer-focused vocational education and training into the
21st century. To meet these challenges, a balance needs to be found between
providing an appropriate range of diversity in Vocational Education and
Training (VET) provision and further enhancing customer choice
and responsiveness to industry and the community.
Barton recognises the importance of financial viability and the value
of economies of scale. The need to become less dependent on government
funding, the importance of strategic alliances, of increased internationalisation
and the development of a customer-focused culture must underpin the operations
of any TAFE institute if the challenges ahead are to be met. Barton has
invested heavily in the future, through conversion of financial reserves
into facilities, equipment, and human resource development to strengthen
our longer term competitiveness. The Edmund Barton Centre, the investment
in technology and the Institute's comprehensive professional development
and management development strategies have positioned the organisation
to lead the field in flexible, responsive best practice.
The identification of optimal sizes and appropriate structural arrangements
of metropolitan TAFE institutions is important in maximising efficiencies
within the system. Optimisation of facilities and rationalisation of corporate
services play an important part in increasing the return on investment.
In determining the most efficient and effective ways of meeting customer
needs in the VET system, the principles of diversity, competition and
genuine user-choice need to be applied.
Responsiveness to local, state, national and international markets
The TAFE institutes of the future, whilst responding to the particular
needs of the local industry and community, will increasingly deliver
programs within the state and national context in their areas of competitive
strength, with such geographical diversity possible through the increasing
application of flexible delivery strategies.
The role that vocational education and training must play in further
internationalising the Australian community and the economy highlights
the requirement, not only for an increase in inbound international students,
but the requirement to work in partnership with companies and governments
in delivering specialist training in the Asia/Pacific region. The role
of education in enhancing our export performance makes this area of further
development imperative.
These distinct areas of TAFE institution program and service delivery,
highlight the need to promote the status of TAFE institutes for the contribution
they make to our economic performance. Limiting the capacity of TAFE institutes
to fulfil this important and expanding role by subsuming them into higher
education institutions is not, in Barton's view, in the interests of Victoria.
It is imperative to maintain the responsiveness and flexibility expected
from TAFE institutes, and to promote them for the distinctly different
roles and relationships they have to higher education institutions.
TAFE's role in delivering the VCE
The government's requirement for more vocational emphasis and opportunities
within the Victorian Certificate of Education can only be enhanced by
freeing up the present limitations on TAFE institutes in the delivery
of such components of the VCE. They are clearly best placed to
use their facilities, expertise, and strong relationships with local industries
to most effectively deliver such components of the Certificate. In Barton's
case our plans to play a significant role in the provision of employment
services, further strengthens the justification for allowing the delivery
of such programs in TAFE and the linking of education to work.
Significance of strategic alliances with higher education and workplace
partnerships
The important role that TAFE institutes must play in setting up strategic
alliances with other educational institutions and with organisations within
Australia and overseas needs to be supported. The benefits of developing
workplace learning partnerships could be significantly diminished if high
performing TAFE institutions were subsumed within existing university
structures.
Barton currently has collaborative arrangements with a number of universities
in Melbourne and overseas. These include joint project work and articulation
arrangements with Deakin, Melbourne, Monash and RMIT universities, the
Institute Pertanian in Bogor, Indonesia, and the University of Leicester,
UK
Barton is able to move freely between universities in negotiating credit
and partnership arrangements, with the aim of most comprehensively promoting
user choice and meeting customers need for recognition, flexibility and
responsiveness.
In particular, the delivery of higher education programs under licence
or in partnership with universities, whether they be Australian or overseas,
would enable TAFE institutes to provide more comprehensive training packages
to companies, enhancing their competitiveness and opening up new opportunities
in the international training market.
Any changes to structural arrangements brought about by this review,
and in particular those that affect Barton, must create greater learning
opportunities for individuals and organisations through higher quality
programs, a wider range of learning strategies, and stronger relationships
between the educational and industrial sectors.
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