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 84

TAFE SA

Regency Institute

Maureen Morton

The Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education

The roles of TAFE can be usefully looked at in four specific ways,

1. Providing access to employment for young people is a critical role for TAFE Institutes. Here, not withstanding that more secondary schools are undertaking courses in vocational education, secondary schools are geared to a culture of providing well rounded educated, literate and numerate young people. Schools rarely employ skilled tradespeople to teach young people. TAFE Institutes are geared to provide skill specific training to standards increasingly set internationally in order to teach people how to understand the concepts of working to a price and a time standard of quality.

2. The greatest emphasis for TAFE Institutes is driven by the Federal Government Reform agenda and The Australian National Training Authority, i.e. to become ever closer to industry. TAFE staff increasingly teach customised courses, ,frequently on site and at times specific to the industry served. This drive to become increasingly closer to industry is critical for TAFE as well as for industry. TAFE and industry increasingly understand the international imperatives of a globally competitive economy. This international agenda is driving the need for Australia to develop a highly skilled, very adaptable and resourceful workforce in order for Australians to maintain high standards of living. The vast majority of individual students attending TAFE courses do so in the expectation of getting a job as an outcome of a course, or of getting a better job as a consequence of gaining skills or upgrading their position because of better qualifications. The overall effect of TAFE closeness to industry means that disadvantaged students, unemployed students etc, choose to study with TAFE because of this interaction. Close liaison with industry that means that courses taught are industrially relevant with skills immediately applicable on the job.

3. With increasing numbers of people becoming retrenched or unemployed due to the rapid changes in technology, downsizing of the workforce and more and more people employed on fixed term contracts, TAFE as an avenue for continual reskilling of the workforce becomes ever more critical to the population as a whole.

The ability to continually build upon a skills base in order to maintain one's employability will become more of a necessity than a luxury as people in the workforce come to understand the concept. In 1997 30% of the South Australian workforce are employed on contracts or in several part-time positions as listed by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

It is also necessary for the Government to support the provision of a publicly funded Organisation such as TAFE in order to provide stability as a national training provider at a time of increasing multiplicity of training providers. It is worth making the point that the 75% of the population that do not attend Universities now have a bewildering plethora of training providers to choose from in an increasingly complex and bureaucratic training market.

Rodney Attwood, member of the Regency Institute council and a senior Engineer for the Kinhill Group stated that "TAFE as the national training provider needs to be the powerhouse of training and retraining for industry. TAFE staff must be able to anticipate and continuously upgrade skill levels in order to work with industry to drive the retraining agenda."

4. The role of TAFE as a second chance education and training Organisation for many people is not a proposition to be dismissed lightly. In this modern world too many people are failing at school due to the circumstances in which they find themselves. Transient families, breakdown of families, or even violent and abusive families, refugees and migrants coming in to Australia from overseas, all require assistance to develop the skills that will enable them to take a place in an increasingly complex society.

TAFE has an excellent reputation in assisting people to pick up on literacy and numeracy skills and on social interaction skills built into these courses, TAFE offers the facilities for people to move easily through courses, coming in at the very basic levels of a programme and proceeding through to a skills programme always with the back up support to successfully compete and achieve in the chosen area. TAFE also has a long history of success in assisting people to move seamlessly through all levels of education into the workforce.

TAFE is a unique repository of intellectual skills that enable new and fledgling industries to tap into support and training in their early years that commonly lead into larger industries and profitable areas of the economy for a State or for Australia.

In South Australia examples of this are in the area of viticulture and the rapid growth of the wine industry, in aquaculture and increasingly in the areas of food processing and food technology, all of which have led to significant growth in exports. This link between TAFE and industry enables TAFE to respond at speed to a new or developing industry before actual demand can be gauged in order for training hours to be set.

This skilled staffing base is also assisting in the rapid expansion of overseas students attending TAFE courses in Australia and increasing numbers of Managers from overseas attending customised courses in South Australia.

TAFE Institutes play a vital role in the Australian educational arena. Their range of skills focussed, industry related courses, coupled with an ability to continually, rapidly change curricula to meet emerging demands has enabled many industries to grow and flourish.

The interaction between growing numbers of TAFE lecturers teaching in various training consultancies overseas and the growing numbers of overseas students studying here is giving South Australia an increasing body of international market intelligence which is markedly assisting local companies to increase their exporting Opportunities. Value adding through training. The Regency Institute has developed "The Gourmets Choice" a network of South Australian food companies who wish to export their goods. The Institute is assisting these companies to sell their specialised food products to the increasing numbers of Hotels in China and Malaysia through the International College of Hotel management courses.

The number of TAFE campuses ensure that a vocational skills course is reasonably within reach Of most of the Population, including people in remote and isolated locations.

The pride that TAFE lecturers and graduates of TAFE display in the gaining of high level skills, the understanding of the need for continuous innovation and improvement, the rapid growth in understanding of the need for quality systems demonstrate that the TAFE Organisation is a national asset that should be encouraged to grow and flourish in order to ensure the continual provision of a highly skilled workforce.

The Extent to which these roles should overlap with Universities

The role of universities in society has been debated for over a thousand years. Their Primary Purpose would appear to be for research and the development of intellectual property,.their teaching based on research.

There is circumstantial evidence to support the view that TAFE courses once absorbed into a University culture will disappear as students opt for the perceived greater status of university courses. This will lead to the acceleration of skills shortages as is currently being experienced.

One such example is the amalgamation of Wellington Polytechnic into a local University. The senior staff of the polytechnic, responsible for vocational areas have been given two years to upgrade the qualification levels of awards offered. eg current trade cookery area to upgrade to at least a Diploma or phase the programme out. This is due to the funding base and the academic profile of the university.

While it may be argued that such events may not occur in Australia, if the preplanning is not appropriately carried out, these situations will occur. The community and industry perceptions are very strong in terms of their expectations of the roles of universities and TAFE. An amalgamation between these sectors would certainly impact on the effectiveness of either to maintain their key focus.

The question could more profitably be turned around to ask how far Universities should be allowed to overlap into what has been traditionally TAFE territory. The expansion of the University sector has been at the expense of TAFE and is giving rise to a real shortage of skilled tradespeople, skilled technicians and skilled support staff that will enable Australia to maintain and improve it's international competitiveness.

The Universities with their concern for increased enrolments have lowered their entrance standards to embrace a wider group of students and have under valued the role of skills taught in the TAFE sector to the disadvantage of the Australian economy and workforce as a whole.

There is a need and indeed an award based opportunity for TAFE to conduct three year Bachelor Degree courses with an emphasis on the application of technology and the development of application technology rather than the principles of technology so well researched and taught by Universities.

The courses developed and conducted by TAFE Institutions should be articulated through to the University sector with the facility to continue to recognise completed studies at the same level as the original award, being recognised as endorsements to the original qualification, thus maintaining the currency and relevance of the qualification.

The most recent report by Philip Curran "Workskills and the Competitiveness of Nations " makes the point that although in terms of world competitiveness Australia ranks equally amongst the top countries internationally with numbers of people with University qualifications, it is a long way behind when it comes to numbers of people with vocational skills qualifications.

At a time when Australia already has more doctors dentists and lawyers than it can usefully employ, it. is experiencing a shortage of skilled tradespeople in the areas of tool making, metal fabrication, robotics etc and has already commenced recruitment from overseas.

In conclusion, the Council of Regency Institute recommends that there is a very real, necessary, national role for Institutes of TAFE. That the government should contain the growth of Universities at this time through the diversion of funds to the TAFE sector and look for ways to encourage more young people especially to consider skills areas for employment. Regency Institute Council believes that the government will need to underpin this drive to encourage more young people into new and emerging skills areas by a strategic campaign of advertising these areas as desirable areas of growth for the future of Australia's economy.

Members of the Regency Institute Council would be very pleased to meet with the committee to discuss any aspects of this paper that may need further elucidation.

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