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 23

Submission to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training on behalf of the University of Western Sydney.

Context and Purpose

The University of Western Sydney is dedicated to enhancing educational opportunities for the diverse and growing communities of Greater Western Sydney (GWS) in a context of economic and social development. The needs and demands which this places on the education system are huge, diverse, and frequently inter-related.

It is essential that the education system be developed responsively to need, and as a loosely articulated system rather than as segments or sectors in isolation from one another. It is also important that the education system here develops in consort and partnership with the other key elements and stakeholders which comprise the growing GWS community and region.

In terms of post-compulsory and post-secondary education (we use the concept 'tertiary' here) it is impossible for the University to meet all needs single-handed. Tertiary education, provided jointly by the university or higher education and the TAFE sectors and in close cooperation with other private, community and public sector interests, can raise aspirations and expectations, enhance access and equity, and raise attainment levels throughout this vital area of Australia.

To fulfil its mission, UWS needs a close partnership with the TAFE Institutes in its region. There are excellent examples of cooperative endeavour between TAFE Institutes and UWS. These are multiplying, and discussions are under way to move towards a major system-level partnership between TAFE and UWS for the educational, economic and social development of GWS.

The potential economic gains to Australia from the mobilisation and utilisation of human resources in this region are immense. No less important are the gains which can be won for social integration and in combatting social exclusion.

GWS is unique among Australian regions in the rapidity of its population and economic growth, and its potential to do good or harm for the country, depending on how successful development and a sense of civic participation in the national endeavour may be. This is the local context for this submission.

However, the GWS phenomenon merely dramatises the propositions about the roles of TAFE Institutes made below. These propositions have similar force through Australia, although the mission of different universities in a diversifying Unified National System will lead some universities to work more closely with TAFE than others.

TAFE Institutes and Higher Education

With wise political leadership and appropriate resourcing, TAFE Institutes will play a much enhanced role in Australia's development, and in its ability to sustain prosperity in the competitive global environment and within the East and SE Asian region. It is important in the next few years to ensure that TAFE comes of age, grows in confidence and is able to connect its efforts from a position of strength not only with schools and universities but also with private and public sector employers.

The relationship between TAFE Institutes and State Administrations requires reflection and review to ensure that proper institutional and professional development can occur.

Whether at Institute or at large-College level, it is now time to consider incorporation of TAFE institutions to give them the capability for operational enterprise within accountability and quality assurance frameworks. This is showing large benefits to the Further Education sector in the now booming UK.

Central regulatory frameworks should be so managed as to guarantee quality while minimising administrative cost, bureaucratic delay, and standardisation which inhibits local responsiveness and local partnership. The first decade of the 21st century should be the decade of the 'new TAFE'.

TAFE Institutes, like universities, must balance within their curricula, the practical and applied education which an intelligent application of the 'Competency approach' offers, with the wider general or liberal education traditionally associated with the universities.

Both TAFE and higher education must combine liberal and vocational, theoretical and applied, education in ways which prepare ALL their students, and ultimately all citizens, to become and remain active learners throughout life.

Through-life participation in tertiary education on a flexible, recurrent, needs-driven basis should approach the 100% participation level as the whole adult population comes to use TAFE Institutes, or universities, at some time or times in their lives and working careers.

It is not acceptable in the Australian ethos permanently to separate training for TAFE students from education for university students. TAFE Institutes must - like universities - become service stations for lifelong learning and technical or professional updating.

Combined promotion of tertiary education opportunities, joint curriculum development and review, shared staff and Organisation development, and combined articulation and partnership with local industry (in the broadest sense) are required.

This integration of effort between relatively autonomous entrepreneurially led and innovative TAFE and universities will allow Australia to compete economically by building continuous renewal of skills and knowledge at all levels. It will also sustain the essential Australian tradition and value of a relatively open, egalitarian, land of opportunity.

The Standing Committee should therefore take as its reference point abiding Australian values and qualities. It cannot limit itself to just the particular economic models which may temporarily hold reign. It should note the tendency away from narrow market-driven and consumer-based approaches which is evident in other leading regions of the world.

Institutional autonomy, entrepreneurialism and efficiency should be combined with accountability in TAFE Institutes or colleges. At the same time there is a clear public interest and public good in fostering skills and knowledge acquisition through all sectors on the population, and the State (whether federal or State level) has a responsibility to protect and advance this.

Failure of access and equity is very costly in lost human and production potential as well as in terms of possible social disruption. TAFE Institutes should be resourced, and judged for their value added, from these perspectives, with criteria operationalised in social development and equity as well as narrowly fiscal terms.

The Relationship between TAFE and University

There is no sharp actual distinction between the education offered and the learning which occurs in TAFE, and what happens at university. Both have strong vocational or economic orientation and both are and must be increasingly market-responsive, led by economic requirements and individual (or client) demand.

In future TAFE Institutes should acquire more of the characteristics historically associated with universities in their longer-vision general education and human development (equipping for lifelong learning).

The role of TAFE Institutes should thus progressively shift. They should not abandon in any way their dedication to serving the whole post-school population of their regions. Partnership with universities as well as other modes of development should however enrich the longer-term or through-life aspects of the curriculum.

There needs to be progressive fading of the distinction between short-term training and long-term education so that higher proportions of the population become equipped to cope with continuous change and globalisation.

As part of this progressive development of the strictly educational role of TAFE

Institutes, partnership with universities should strengthen.

Articulation should become automatic, so that full credit recognition allows natural progression between TAFE and universities in both directions and at any time in an individual's life. Consultation should lead to join planning, curriculum development, so that students will quite normally take 'terminal' vocational courses which are also fully recognised parts of university degrees. Devices such as [associate degrees within TAFE will naturally assist this.

It is unhelpful, and will increasingly prove impossible, to draw a sharp distinction between university and evolving TAFE education. An increasing proportion of 'higher education will and should take place within TAFE Institutes.

There are dangers of wasteful competition to provide courses in common and popular areas, while less obvious and easily serviced needs are ignored by both sectors. Local and regional partnerships between confident and quite autonomous, but professionally led, institutions may progressively allow the development of much more integrated, yet diverse, learning opportunities.

Note

This short submission addresses the crucial strategic issues which the Standing Committee needs to consider. The University will be pleased to make an oral submission to the Committee, and to discuss the practical operational steps which this view of the future role of TAFE Institutes implies.

Deryck M chreuder

22 October 1997

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