Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Workplace Relations
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Submission 62
Northern Territory University
Submission to the Inquiry into the Appropriate Roles of Institutes of
Technical and Further Education
Preamble
Northern Territory University was established in 1989 through the merger
of the Darwin Institute of Technology (formerly Darwin Community College)
and the University College of the Northern Territory. From 1989-1994,
NTU had an Institute of TAFE (ITAFE) as part of its structure. ITAFE was
dismantled and replaced from January 1995 by a structure which incorporates
vocational education and training1 (VET) and higher education
components on an equal footing, to ensure that optimal advantage may be
had from this combination of activities.
There are presently nine faculties at NTU. They are:
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
Arts
Business
Education
Foundation Studies
Industrial Education and Training
Law
Science
Technology
Six faculties include both higher education and VET components, two faculties
with only higher education components and one faculty with only a VET
component.
Approach
Northern Territory University's strategic plan, Strategic Directions,
states the University's mission as:
The University will provide education, training, research and related
services locally, nationally and internationally to support and advance
the social, cultural, intellectual and economic development of Australia's
Northern Territory
One of the five 'strategic themes' the University focusses on in Strategic
Directions is the 'full integration of higher education and vocational
education and training, expanding opportunities for articulation, credit
transfer and progression and promoting cross-sectoral multiple awards'.
NTU's approach is to consider tertiary education, in its ideal structure,
to be a 'seamless web' with vocational education and training and higher
education opportunities being characterised by pathways for students to
move from one sector to the other with few if any barriers between them.
The benefits to this approach to students include:
- diminution or eradication of the need to cover subject content in
higher education already learned in VET;
- savings in time in formal study;
- 'second chance' opportunities to gain University qualifications,
especially for mature age students.
The benefits of this approach to the institution include:
- former VET students are motivated and enthusiastic and usually perform
well in higher education courses;
- student numbers of cohorts in later years of degree programs can
be kept higher with the entry of VET-prepared students;
- with fully developed articulation arrangements, NTU can market some
of its programs as, 'open entry', since we can provide courses to match
a potential student's entry behaviour.
The benefits of this approach to the region NTU services include:
- savings in physical infrastructure costs, with VET and higher education
courses offered on its campuses where the majority of students attend;
- savings in administrative infrastructure with a single organisational.
structure responsible for VET and higher education, with the facility
to acknowledge, promote and support both VET and higher education missions,
without diminishing either;
- opportunities to promote higher education to VET transfers and dual
qualifications, while not yet fully exploited at NTU, are founded on
the notion that skills acquisition is facilitated by a competency-based
training environment. The facilities and equipment are either available
already at NTU or the mechanisms to promote and supervise on-the-job
training are in place, thus eliminating the need for additional infrastructure
costs;
- ability to respond to meet the needs of industry and community service
organisations cost-effectively, where more than one level of employee
is required by industry eg in librarianship, early childhood care and
education; engineering; business; science; tourism; nursing and so on;
- NTU students rarely, if ever, refer to themselves as 'going to TAFE'
as is common in the other regions of Australia. They say, instead they
are 'going to Uni'. This means both VET and higher education students
identify with the institution which serves their region and have opportunities
open to them to participate fully in the whole range of NTU activities;
- NTU having an advantage in being able to promote its courses locally
and overseas as allowing students to progress from certificate level
to postgraduate level study in a single institution.
There are difficulties, however, in sustaining this general approach.
These include:
- lack of ability of funding source organisations to appreciate fully
the integrated nature of NTU's organisational structure which, on occasion,
can mean it is not easy to identify sources of funds and carry out reporting
requirements for some provisions. Funding bodies sometimes feel that
they are subsidising others;
- VET's growing inattention to the primacy of general education for
participants in postcompulsory education, the shift to workplace training,
reduction in the amount of underpinning knowledge and general education
as students progress through a limited learning experience often in
isolation from other students, are concerns. The focus on the development
of very specifically focussed sequences of training, and the move to
recognise competencies rather than completed units or modules of study
may make it, potentially, more difficult to accommodate VET to higher
education credit transfers;
- inequity of fee situation highlighted in common qualifications. That
is, the equivalent to advanced diploma in higher education attracts
HECS fees. The corresponding fee in VET is normally much lower;
- ยท reporting difficulties include not reflecting the institution's
contribution to equity groups. The particularly relevant example to
NTU is that our higher education reporting indicates 4% Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander participation rate at this time. This way of
reporting denies acknowledgment of NTLJ's contribution, overall, because
participation in VET programs, which are very relevant to the needs
of indigenous Australians, is not taken into account.
Contacts
Assoc Professor Robyn Young Pro Vice-Chancellor (Higher Education)
Mr Antoine Barnaart Pro Vice-Chancellor (Vocational Education and Training)
1 Vocational Education and Training (VET) is the term used
at Northern Territory University to encompass those activities formerly
described as Technical and Further Education (TAFE).
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