Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Workplace Relations
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It may contain some errors
Submission 61
Griffith University
Queensland
October, 1997
Submission to House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment,
Education and Training
on the appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further
education;
and the extent to which those roles should overlap with universities
Contents
Overview
Recommendations
Introduction
The Current Situation
Bases for Intervention
A Desirable Future Australia
A Productive Australia
Productivity in Relation to the Individual and Society
Vocational Education
Desirable Institutional Arrangements
Conclusions
References
Overview
"A vocation means nothing but such a direction of life activities
as renders them perceptibly significant to a person, because of the consequences
they accomplish, and also useful to his [sic] associates. Occupation is
a concrete term for continuity. It includes the development of artistic
capacity of any kind, of special scientific ability, of effective citizenship,
as well as professional and business occupations, to say nothing of mechanical
labor or engagement in gainful pursuits. We must avoid not only limitation
of conception of vocation to the occupations where immediately tangible
commodities are produced, but also the notion that vocations are distributed
in an exclusive way, one and only one to each person ... In the first
place, each individual has of necessity a variety of callings, in each
of which he should be intelligently effective; and in the second place
any one occupation loses its meaning and becomes a routine keeping busy
at something in the degree in which it is isolated from other interests.
No one is just an artist and nothing else, and in so far as one approximates
that condition, he is so much the less developed human being; he is some
kind of monstrosity. He must, at some period of his life, be a member
of a family; he must have friends and companions; he must either support
himself or be supported by others, and thus he has a business career.
He is a member of some organized political unit, and so on. We naturally
name his vocation from that one of his callings which distinguishes
him, rather than from those which he has in common with all others. But
we should not allow ourselves to be so subject to words as to ignore and
virtually deny his other callings when it comes to consideration of the
vocational phases of education." (Dewey, 1916, pp 307-308)
The nature of a desirable future Australia and a vision for a productive
Australia compel fresh approaches to education as a whole and vocational
education in particular. What is required is a more holistic view of vocation,
affording value to a broad set of knowledges.
The current problems and issues for vocational education derive, in part,
from dated ideas about the nature of production and required vocational
knowledge. Moreover, they are out of kilter with desirable directions
for Australian society as a whole and do not develop the knowledge needed
to contribute to achieving such desired change. Changes in production,
changes in required knowledge, and changes in societal -goals as well
as changes that have occurred in the nature and range of Australian educational
activities have eroded the distinctiveness of the mission and role of
Institutes of TAFE. Moreover, the contemporary TAFE focus on vocational
knowledge circumscribes their possible role in lifelong learning
The required changes necessitate a clear definition of
the role of Institutes of TAFE and universities. Too much blurring may
be hazardous as TAFE Institutes place a high value on practical knowledge
and provide access to a diversity of students.
Recommendations
Recommendation I
Arrangements for educational institutions in Australia be based on
a vision of a desirable future Australia, including a vision for a productive
Australia. From this perspective, contemporary problems and issues are
addressed more substantively and the likelihood is increased that more
coherent and long lasting adjustments are made to the range of educational
opportunities in Australia.
Recommendation 2
Visions for the role of education in Australia be inclusive of the
needs of both individuals and society as a whole as well as interaction
between them.
That
- the needs of individuals be taken to include knowledge, personal
control and responsibility;
- the needs of individuals in relation with others: caring, justice,
equity, harmony, interdependence, collaboration; and
- the needs of society: local, national and international interests
and interrelationships, the economy, the environment. research and knowledge
development.
Recommendation 3
Institutional arrangements for education be devised to overcome dominance
of single sets of interests over others.
Recommendation 4
Counterbalances to competition be established to ensure that the long-term
development and reproduction of necessary skills and knowledge, both in
the labourforce and in the means of production of educational services,
are not jeopardised.
Recommendation 5
The role of vocational education be taken to include not only capacities
for technical activities, and the economic knowledges suggested in Table
4, but also:
- enables individuals to construct meaning,
- transforms individuals,
- enables individuals to engage in activities they find fulfilling,
enables individuals to come to know themselves and society more fully,
enables individuals to contribute to society as a whole through developing
such characteristics as those given in Table 1,
- develops the re-constituting capacities listed in Table 5, and
- encourages critical voices in society.
Recommendation 6
Education be centred on the individual and the connectedness among
the individuals' vocations in life, where vocation is taken to include
not only paid productive work in an occupation, but also any other calling
in which a person wishes to be effective and which they find personally
and socially significant.
Recommendation 7
It is recommended that any changes in tertiary educational institutional
arrangements advance existing arrangements against the following criteria
i. Interests
- Meet individual needs
- Advance social priorities (eg ecological, inter-cultural, quality
of life, educational development of particular social groups (indigenous,
NESB learners, ..), economic (macro-economic, enterprises), government
- national, state and local, non-profit groups)
- Include plural interests in decision-making (personal, societal
and economic)
- Advance the creation and advancement of knowledge
- Are adequately funded (responsibilities and sources)
ii. Access
- Provide equitable forms of entry
- Overcome disadvantage in delivery
- Articulate and advance recognition of existing knowledge
- Provide recognised credentials
iii. Curricula
- Develop knowledge for lifelong individual development
- Give equal weight to theoretical and practical knowledge
- Develop knowledge for responsible societal advancement
economic
cultural
intercultural
critical
ecological
knowledge development
Recommendation 8
Changes in tertiary institutional arrangements should be such that:
- high value continues to be afforded to both practical and theoretical
knowledge
- the knowledge developed for vocational purposes focus primarily
on the needs of individuals in relation to those vocations and the relationships
between that vocation and the advancement of plural societal goals,
both as important contexts for the development of specialised practical
and theoretical knowledge
- special attention is given to the development of critical knowledge
in vocational education
- a renewed focus on adult education and lifelong learning be focused
in TAFE
Recommendation 9
Cooperation and collaboration should be encouraged between TAFE Institutes
and universities in order to develop a fuller range of vocational knowledge
and achieve fuller provision of a diverse range of educational services
across the community. Such arrangements should acknowledge a renewed focus
on adult lifelong learning for TAFE in the context of distinctive roles
of TAFEs and universities.
Introduction
The last ten years have seen significant changes in the structures and
expectations of tertiary education institutions in Australia. Vocational
education has been transformed from a sector that was largely constituted
by TAFE provisions, to the current circumstances where TAFE institutes
are now but part of the provision for vocational education; and
from a situation where the activities of TAFE institutes were distinct
from higher education, to one where their is contestation about the boundaries
and relationships between the activities of these kinds of institutions.
Dominant factors in impelling these changes have been an attempt to constrain
public expenditure on education as a whole, an attempt to relate education
more closely to economic reform, and an attempt to secure greater economic
efficiencies in the delivery of tertiary education. Rather than fashioning
a response to the current inquiry, confined to an appraisal of current
circumstances and changes, this submission takes as its starting point
the role that education should play in the social and economic development
of Australia and the nature of social and economic change. From these
considerations, goals and roles of vocational education are advanced,
and then possible institutional arrangements are suggested.
Thus, in this submission, the two terms of reference :
i. the appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further education;
and
ii. the extent to which those roles should overlap with universities
are addressed as follows.
First, the current situation of Institutes of TAFE is set in context
in relation to other educational activities, the role of education generally,
especially in relation to production and the public good, and changes
in society and the economy. Problems and issues are identified, and bases
are suggested for intervention. These bases are advanced from considerations
of the relationships among production and other aspects of society, are
outlined, and are then used to fashion recommendations related to the
two terms of reference of the inquiry.
The Current Situation
In Australia, there exists a range of educational sectors and institutions.
This range has developed to meet different kinds of perceived needs of
individuals and of society as a whole. For the individual,
the needs include their own growth and development across the lifespan,
and, for society as a whole, the needs include the following to advance
and develop justly and equitably culturally, socially, democratically,
technologically, politically and economically, with due concern for citizens,
the environment, and international relationships.
As in other countries, Australia has developed broad sectors that can
be labelled schooling, vocational education and higher education. Pressures
for change within these sectors have generally emanated from
i. crises within the productive sectors of the Australian economy;
ii the developing roles and policies of Government and its institutions;
and
iii the evolution of cultural institutions and aspirations within Australian
society, including those of the individual and family within the context
of inclusivity and social justice.
Some of the inter-related developments (most relevant to the immediate
circumstances of technical and further education in Australia ) which
have given rise to the current set of institutional arrangements are:
- the rapid rate of technological innovation associated with economic
activity
- historically high levels of unemployment, especially among the young
- gradual lengthening of the extent of compulsory education and increased
participation in later years of schooling
- increased student demand for university places,
- implementation of national frameworks for qualifications standardisation,
and
- increased distribution of responsibilities for vocational education
across public institutions (schools, TAFE colleges, universities), industry
and the private sector.
In arriving at the current arrangements, Australia has:
- created Colleges of Advanced Education, but eventually amalgamated
them with Universities, creating a diverse university sector
- created a TAFE sector which brought together and formalised technical
and adult education, but gradually led to diminished public provision
of adult enrichment courses
- established government bodies charged with improving and expanding
vocational education (eg National Training Board and ANTA)
- sought to encourage industry to engage in more training (through such
devices as levies and membership of ITABs)
- continued to re-shape the vocational education sector through such
devices as competency-based training, qualification frameworks, competitive
funding basis, increased private provision, and narrowing of the time
horizons and scope of vocational courses and
- increased the opportunities for vocational education in schools (through
expansion of the range of credentials and the elements that are recognised
on credentials)
Despite the current arrangements and the interventions that have led
to them, many problematic issues, such as the following, still exist:
- the low status of vocational education and its impact on student demand
- establishing desirable relationships among learning producing and
living
- establishing coherent relationships among "vocational",
"academic" and" general" education
- preparing people for changing structures and relationships in society
- identifying and developing knowledge that prepares learners for known
and unknown future work situations
- achieving specialisation, skilfulness and job readiness for particular
workplaces
- establishing coherent relationships across educational activities
and institutions
- low levels of industry training
- dissatisfaction of industry with the nature of knowledge that young
people bring to the workplace
There is a range of social variables which are involved. These variables
interact to create the current situation and can be modified to effect
changes.
The operation of variables relating to social values and institutions
as well as broad economic and social factors contributing to the stability
of any given situation is mediated by a number of social processes, for
instance those of say:
- political processes: executive Government, parliament, law
- financial arrangements
- news media
- entertainment
- market place
- work force
- family
- person/affective relationships
- family
- education
Thus, it is to education that an important role falls in contributing,
to the current nature and problems of vocational and other forms of education
in Australian society. However, education is but one of the mediating
influences. Moreover, attempts to bring about change in major economic
areas such as employment for example, through changes in education, will
be sustainable only if they take account of some of the inter-relationships
that are involved. In seeking then to intervene, firm bases for intervention,
that take account of social mediation and the representation of interests
in this mediation are important. The next section advances such bases.
Bases for Intervention
Against the long evolution of institutional arrangement in education
in Australia and like countries, and the continuing problems that confront
these institutions in meeting both individual and societal needs, this
submission suggests that at least three inter-related bases for further
interventions are needed. These are:
- a vision of a desirable future Australia (focusing on values and aspirations)
- a vision of a productive Australia (focusing on production: enterprises,
labour, capital, aggregated formations)
- a clear understanding of the kinds of knowledges that are required
to achieve these visions and their interrelationships
Against such substantive basis for further adjustment of the provision
of educational opportunities in Australia, any changes may have a granter
likelihood of overcoming seemingly trenchant problems. The remainder of
this paper seeks to advance such visions and goals and to recommend changes
in current arrangements that are necessary.
Recommendation I
Arrangements for educational institutions in Australia be based
on a vision of a desirable future Australia, including a vision for a
productive Australia. From this perspective, contemporary problems and
issues are addressed more substantively and the likelihood is increased
that more coherent and long lasting adjustments are made to the range
of educational opportunities in Australia
A Desirable Future Australia
"the educational activities promoted by any society are intimately
connected with what that society believes is a valuable form of life.
Furthermore the particular values embodied in what is designated to be
educational will be about the kind of persons that the society
wishes its young people to grow up into - the kind of sensitivities, mental
powers, basic skills and knowledge that are embodied in the traditions
and the aspirations of that society.... Different societies will emphasize
different values." (Pring, 1986: 181-182)
Campbell, McMeniman and Baikaloff (1992 a, b) used a Delphi technique,
to identify the visions of leading Australian thinkers about a desirable
future Australia, followed by multi-dimensional scaling, to cluster the
goals that they identified. A total of 22 goals was identified and concept
maps based on these goals were elicited. In their analysis of concept
maps based on these goals five levels of goals were derived as depicted
in Table 1.
While there may be other visions for a desirable Australia, the one depicted
in Table I is a good starting point for identifying the kinds of knowledges
that people need. For example, the individual and societal concerns which
are represented in these levels, range across the development and transformation
of individuals through to concerns about the planet and non-human life
and about the economy. From this Table, one can identify three kinds of
needs for human development in achieving a desirable future Australia.
These are the development of-
- the individual in relation to the self (eg. knowledge, self-control
and responsibility)
- the individual's relationships with others (eg. caring, justice,
equity, harmony, inter-dependence, collaboration)
- society itself (eg. local, national and international interests
and inter-relationships; the economy; the environment, research
and knowledge development)
Table 1: A goal value system for a desirable future Australia (Campbell,
McMeniman & Baikaloff, 1992 b, pp. 19-20)
Level |
Goal Sets |
1
|
A society which values its members intrinsically: ascription of
inherent worth; care and compassion; equitable treatment
|
2
|
A society which displays international and ecological responsibility:
concern for persons throughout the planet; ecologically sustainable
developments; protection of flora and fauna
A society which is committed to the development of individuals
within an overarching concern with moral responsibility: knowledge;
higher order cognitions; empathy; sense of personal control; spirituality/human
spirit
|
3
|
A society with caring processes of interaction: harmony; collaboration
|
4
|
A society which provides supportive networks: families; neighbourhoods
A society which offers supportive identities: national; regional;
global
|
5
|
A society with a robust economy: intellectually driven; value added;
diversified-based
|
Recommendation 2
Visions for the role of education in Australia be inclusive of
the needs of both individuals and society as a whole as well as interaction
between them
That
- the needs of individuals be taken to include knowledge, personal
control and responsibility;
- the needs of individuals in relation with others: caring, justice,
equity, harmony, inter-dependence, collaboration; and
- the needs of society: local, national and international interests
and interrelationships, the economy, the environment, research and knowledge
development.
Some of these emphases are emphasised more than others in different periods
in our recent history, in Australia, the UK and the USA, paralleling socioeconomic
crises, as depicted in Table 2. As can be seen from the table, while there
has been some alternation between emphases on the individual and on society,
there have been periods when there has been some emphasis on both. As
the table also indicates, the emphases on the individual or society and
on both have not been inclusive of the full range of concerns identified
in Table 1. For example, it is often the case that the needs of society
are totally represented as the perceived needs of industry.
Table 2: Changes in Educational Emphases over Time
(Modified from Stevenson, 1993b)
EMPHASES |
CRISES |
CHARACTERISTICS |
Individual Development: Learning from experience and doing
(also an instrument of social improvement) (Dewey, 1916)
|
|
Progressive Organisation of ideas and information through construction
and reconstruction of experience in pursuit of vocation
|
Needs of Society: Scientific efficiency
(Bobbitt, 1924; Charters, 1924)
|
Post-war
reconstruction;
Great Depression
|
Develop routinised automated manual dexterity, related to industrial
demands
|
Individual Development:
Needs of Society:
Tyler, 1949
|
|
Studies of the learner, the subject matter and society; aim for
plural outcomes drawn from all aspects of social life
|
Needs of Society: Behaviourism
(Mager, 1962; Skinner, 1954)
|
Depression
|
Develop observable, measurable performance on predicted tasks
|
Individual Development: Humanism
(Maslow, 1971; Rogers, 1969) Adult learning (Knowles, 1979, 1980);
UNESCO Report on Learning to Be (Faure et al, 1972)
|
|
Help individuals to develop in ways
that are important to them
|
Needs of Society: OECD Report on Competencies Needed in
Working Life (OECD, 1980)
|
Depression, 1983
|
Develop functional competence for work as needed in changing workplaces
|
Individual Development:
Reform of Society:-
Critical Theory in Adult Education (eg. Boud, 1987; Brookfield,
1987, 1988, 1992; Mezirow, 1985)
|
|
Empower through learning, and unmask oppression, so that "right"
action can be determined and pursued
|
Needs of Society: Industry driven
education
(National Board of Employment,
Education and Training, 1988;
Secretaries of State for Education and
Science, Employment and Wales, 199 1;
William T Grant Foundation
Commission on Work, Family and
Citizenship, 1991)
|
High levels of youth unemployment, economic and political crisis
|
Teach to industrial standards and for industrial needs in changing
workplaces. Develop competencies", and "core skills"
|
Late 1990s Reform of Society: Redefinitions of work
and working life (Handy, 1989) Flexible accumulation of capital
and Post-Fordism(Harvey, 1989) Competition for the provision of
education and training-. Conversion strategies e.-. flexibility
in delivery, credit transfer, workplace learning
|
Decreased role of government, conversion from public to private
spheres
|
Intellective and connective skills; mobile knowledge worker; symbolic
analysts
|
Needs of Society: New categories of workers for a global
economy (Karpin, West)
|
|
|
Recommendation 3
Institutional arrangements for edification be devised to overcome
dominance of single sets of interests over others.
Recommendation 4
Counterbalances to competition be established to ensure that the
long-term development and reproduction of necessary skills and knowledge,
both In the labour force and in the means of production of educational
services, are not jeopardised.
A Productive Australia
The question of what does and will constitutes productivity in contemporary
and future workplaces is problematic. There is now a considerable literature
suggesting discontinuities in economic directions, and these have been
conceptualised as post-Fordist, post-Eurocommunist, post-structuralist,
postmodernist, post-cultural and so on. While such theses are contestable,
the bases on which they are derived merit consideration. Some of the bases
are:
- The structure of economies is changing with respect to the individual,
familial, local, national, and global dimensions of production
- The balance is moving from core to peripheral work with implications
for both and for a layering of society
- The life spans of a job, an individual's attachment to an employer,
an individual's career and an individual's life plans are reducing
- The balance of what constitutes productive work is shifting from design
and making of goods and provision of services to the continuous re-visualising,
re-financing, re-creating and re-marketing of new and different goods,
services and spectacles
- Global foci, mobility in work, and use of technology for attending
and doing work are increasing
- Access to work is reducing; there are increasing demands for welfare;
and the need for individual subsistence measures is increasing
- Current extensions of the pre-crisis period are being achieved through
increasing consumerism; increasing individual, company, national and
global indebtedness; increasing intensity of work for those wit h jobs;
time and spatial displacement of resourcing, production and consumption;
increasing invasion of private life by work; and increasing commodification
of culture and relationships
- There are increasing needs for new kinds of knowledge and knowledge
production, symbolic analysts, intellective and connective skills and
flexible specialisation
Thus, there is a tension between what can be argued are new, qualitatively
different, economic circumstances, and what can be argued are merely current
devices for extending past economic circumstances. Nevertheless, what
seems to be emerging (even in the streets of Australia, today) is a continuum
of kinds of work as depicted in Table 3. Although the table identifies
two ends of a continuum with a point in-between; rather, the reality is
probably greater continuity between the two ends.
Table 3: Continuum of Economic Conditions suggested
by Contemporary Economic Discourse
Core Work |
Intermediate Work |
Peripheral Work |
Intensive technological innovation
|
Intensive technological application
|
Intensive technological services
|
Global competitiveness, financing,
design, production and marketing of goods, services and spectacles
|
Immediate productivity/ Intensification of labour
|
Sweatshops
|
Paper, commercial and marketing entrepreneurialism;
Creating new sectors of production
|
Adaptation to new enterprises Automation, deskilling/ Loss traditional
craft skills
|
Subsistence
Entrepreneurialis in the production of goods, service and
spectacles;
Artisanship / craft / technological expertise
|
Extensive mental labour/
challenge
|
Breakdown of division between mental and manual labour
|
Intensive manual labour / Monotony
|
Organisational innovation
|
Organisational adaptation
|
Exploitation of migrants, women, children
|
Mergers/ Bank and company failures
|
Redundancies / Relocations
|
Displacement / dispossession
|
Tele-commuting
|
Tele-commuting / work on premises with high accountability for
time
|
work at home
|
In a society, which sees individuals solely in economic terms, then,
such attributes as those listed in the following continuum of different
kinds of economic knowledge would be important (Table 4):
Table 4: Continuum of economic knowledges
Economic Knowledge for Core Work
|
Economic Knowledge for
Intermediate Work
|
Economic Knowledge for Peripheral Work
|
Plan strategically and
opportunistically
|
Generate highly productive
performance,
|
Create new goods, services,
spectacles;
|
Innovate;
|
Apply a variety of skills,
|
Engage in piece-work;
|
Create new markets;
|
Continuously re-skill
|
Generate highly skilled work
|
Access, process and synthesise
from critical information in a
timely manner;
|
Analysis of information;
Respond to sudden changes in
directions and requests;
|
Piecemeal production of
information for sale;
Create market niches outside
|
Create and apply: new
technology, equipment, materials,
processes, techniques, company
organisation and directions,
structure of work and working
arrangements;
reconfigure direction,
organisation, financing, methods
and production
|
Adapt to new technology,
equipment, materials, processes
techniques, organisation,
directions, structure of work and working arrangements
|
or to complement technology and its potential for cheap production
|
While such change may not be pervasive in Australia, examples can be
found throughout the country as they can also in the streets of New York,
Hong Kong and London. These changes, irrespective of their current extent,
nevertheless signal changed local and global contexts for productive activity
in the Australian economy. For Australia to be productive, it needs to
determine where it will position itself economically with respect to such
kinds of changes in the nature of constitute economic activity in the
global context. Moreover, it needs to determine which of the possible
economic scenarios it wishes to support, given the economic, social
and individual benefits and disadvantages. Relationships among economic
activity and the needs of the individual and of society as a whole are
suggested in the following section.
Productivity in Relation to the Individual and Society
Against the arguments advanced above about a desirable future Australia,
it is suggested here, that a desirable economy has the following characteristics.
A desirable economy be taken to be one that:
- delivers benefits not only to businesses but also individuals who
contribute to those businesses
- delivers benefits not only to individuals, but to society as a whole
and to groups within society
- improves rather than damages the natural environment
- is constituted by work which is fulfilling and challenging to individuals
- contributes to, rather than exploits, relationships with other countries
- contributes to the welfare of those without access to work
- is integral to the overall social and cultural development of Australia
For the Australian economy to achieve such characteristics in a changing
world economy, it needs to focus more on what cannot be provided more
cheaply by others. It needs to focus on (and add value to) its productive
activities that harness the unique features of Australia and its people:
i. its resources,
ii. its unique location,
iii. its unique environment,
iv. its unique climate
v. its unique history and traditions,
vi. its cultural diversity,
vii. its innovativeness and leadership in research, and
viii. the resourcefulness of its people.
Desirable future Australian economic directions should be considered
in terms of those productive capacities that harness the unique features
of Australia and its people. In turn, this suggests new and imaginative
responses to strengths, and greater confidence and persistence in creation,
development, production, marketing, distribution and selling.
Whether or not an economy or a society has particular desirable features
depends on capacities of individuals to re-constitute society and the
economy For such reconstitution, the following kinds of capacities would
be required (Table 5).
Table 5: Reconstituting Capacities
- Un-mask and disclose the nature of social and economic change and
their inter-relationships
- Resist and change undesirable features of social and economic change
- Re-build relationships, the environment, cultures and community forms;
- Re-develop one's own capacity for self-and collective sufficiency
- Create cultural and ecological enrichment
- Innovate in culturally and ecologically friendly ways
- Produce and sell in culturally and ecologically friendly ways
- Configure work so that it engenders sharing, cooperation, responsibility,
challenge, personal growth, social contribution and complements non-work
activities and pursuits.
Even economic considerations open the window for non-economic knowledge
and critique, which should be valued in a society for their own sake.
In broad terms, kinds of knowledge that are transformative of individuals,
enable individuals to come to know themselves and society more fully and
to construct meaning-, enable individuals to engage in activities that
they find fulfilling, which contribute to society as a whole through developing
such characteristics as those given in Table I and which encourage critical
voices in society are important to broad and diverse education. The development
of such knowledge is hard to find in the vocational education sector as
a whole.
Recommendation 5
The role of vocational education be taken to include not only capacities
for technical
activities, and the economic knowledges suggested in Table 4, but
also:
- enables individuals to construct meaning,
- transforms individuals,
- enables individuals to engage in activities they find fulfilling,
- enables individuals to come to know themselves and society more
fully,
- enables individuals to contribute to society as a whole through
developing such characteristics as those given in Table 1,
- develops the re-constituting capacities listed in Table 5, and
- encourages critical voices in society.
Vocational Education
Reconstitution of economic activity in order to generate more and better
productivity, while still contributing to individual and overall societal
goals is a tall order. Such plural concerns often lead to unhelpful dualisms
or polarisations of concepts, such as: -
- theoretical vs practical
- academic vs vocational
- knowing vs doing
- mental vs manual
- breadth vs depth
- training vs growth, development
- competence vs ability, excellence, knowledge;
- economic growth vs quality of life;
- productivity vs conservation; and so on
This is undesirable in a rapidly changing world where there is a need
for more continuity between life and work roles and the kinds of knowledge
needed in different pursuits. One possible key to fashioning an approach
to the securement of plural social, economic and individual goals lies
in the idea of vocation advanced by Dewey (I 916, pp. 307-308), almost
100 years ago.
"A vocation means nothing but such a direction of life activities
as renders them perceptibly significant to a person, because of the consequences
they accomplish, and also useful to his (sic] associates. The opposite
of a career is neither leisure or culture, but aimlessness, capriciousness,
the absence of cumulative achievement in experience, on the personal side,
and idle display, parasitic dependence upon others, on the social side.
Occupation is a concrete term for continuity. It includes the development
of artistic capacity of any kind, of special scientific ability, of effective
citizenship, as well as professional and business occupations, to say
nothing of mechanical labor or engagement in gainful pursuits.
We must avoid not only limitation of conception of vocation to the occupations
where immediately tangible commodities are produced, but also the notion
that vocations are distributed in an exclusive way, one and only one to
each person... In the first place, each individual has of necessity a
variety of callings, in each of which he should be intelligently effective;
and in the second place any one occupation loses its meaning and becomes
a routine keeping busy at something in the degree in which it is isolated
from other interests. No one is
just an artist and nothing else, and in so far as one approximates that
condition, he is so much the less developed human being; he is some kind
of monstrosity. He must, at some period of his life, be a member of a
family, he must have friends and companions; he must either support himself
or be supported by others, and thus he has a business career. He is a
member of some organized political unit, and so on. We naturally name
his vocation from that one of his calling which distinguishes him,
rather than from those which he has in common with all others. But we
should not allow ourselves to be so subject to words as to ignore and
virtually deny his other callings when it comes to consideration of the
vocational phases of education."
It is suggested here, that education needs to overcome problems
of meeting individual, economic and societal needs by centring education
on the individual and the connectedness among- individuals' various callings.
It is not enough in vocational education to focus on the immediate (or
the long term even if knowable) needs of industry. It is the needs also
of the individual, the meaning that the individual can assign to experience
in work and other roles and the overall needs of that desirable society
that we are seeking to procure that also need attention. Placing the individual,
rather than industrial standards at the centre of the curriculum is imperative,
in seeking to achieve this kind of connectedness. Ironically, the needs
of industry itself are best met through a primary focus on individual
development in the context of what is thought to be a desirable vision
for society as a whole.
Recommendation 6
Education be centred on the individual and the connectedness among
the individuals' vocations in life, where vocation is taken to include
not only paid productive work in an occupation, but also any other calling
in which a person wishes to be effective and which they find personally
and socially significant.
Desirable Institutional Arrangements
Questions of the role of TAFE institutes and their links with universities
need to be posed in such a broad framework as the one described this far
in our submission. Even so, there can be dilemmas, for instance, any decisions
have, on the one hand, to be seen as rational and democratic and on the
other hand they are being made under pressure from groups who will strive
for arrangements that will advantage the interest of their group over
others. We have suggested as a strategy that the roles of institutions
be judged against their capacity to develop valued knowledge that can
sustain a viable future for Australia.
The foregoing suggests at least the following three sets of interrelated
factors as a basis for institutional arrangements: (i) interests (ii)
access and (iii) curricula. It is recommended that future institutional
arrangements advance interests, access and curricula in the following
ways:
Recommendation 7
It is recommended that any changes in tertiary educational institutional
arrangements advance existing arrangements against the following criteria
i. Interests
- Meet individual needs
- Advance social priorities (eg ecological, inter-cultural quality
of life, educational development of particular social groups (indigenous,
NESB learners,..), economic (macro-economic, enterprises), government
- national, state and local, non-profit groups)
- Include plural interests in decision-making (personal, societal
and economic)
- Advance the creation and advancement of knowledge
- Are adequately funded (responsibilities and sources)
ii. Access
- Provide equitable forms of entry
- Overcome disadvantage in delivery
- Articulate and advance recognition of existing knowledge
- Provide recognised credentials
iii. Curricula
- Develop knowledge for lifelong individual development
- Give equal weight to theoretical and practical knowledge
- Develop knowledge for responsible societal advancement
economic
cultural
intercultural
critical
ecological
knowledge development
If one were to map current institutional arrangements against these
factors, the picture would took something like the following (Table 6).
Table 6: Current Tertiary Educational Institutional Arrangements
Factors |
TAFE |
Intermediate or Un-represented |
Universities |
Interests
|
Economic
Educational development of particular social groups
Government
|
Concern-for intercultural, ecological and quality of life issues
Differential levels of
government
intervention / control
Focus on the
differential needs of
individuals and on
lifelong learning
|
Creation and advancement of
knowledge
Meeting individual needs
Ecological,
Inter-cultural
Quality of life
Economic
Government
|
Access
|
Recognition of prior
learning
Articulated courses
"Second chance" education
National portability or parts
of qualifications
National recognition of credentials
|
Inadequate concern for
equity
|
Barriers to entry
Limited recognition of prior learning
Portability of whole qualifications
International recognition of credentials
|
Curricula
|
Knowledge for immediate
economic utility
Bridging courses
High status for practical knowledge
Low status for theoretical knowledge
|
Emphasis on inter-
cultural and
ecological knowledge
|
Knowledge for immediate economic utility
Critical knowledge
Development of new knowledge
Lower status afforded
practical knowledge
|
From the table, the current arrangements position TAFE in two seemingly
incompatible ways:
i. as an institution, concerned largely with progressing an economic
agenda in the short term interests of industry, without a wider concern
for individual or societal development (notably with no space to develop
such capacities as those outlined in Table 5), and
ii. as a social welfare arm of government in securing "second chances"
for those un-served or unhelped by other available educational arrangements
The consequence of these two distinctive features is that they both
lead to TAFE with a specific limited role, sometimes negatively defined.
On the other hand, the university sector (like schooling) is more positively
defined. It seeks to meet a more plural set of interests, although patchy
in its concern for inter-cultural, ecological and equity concerns. Universities
are only newly coming to a focus on lifelong learning. The pressure on
universities to become more economically responsive, rather than engaging
in purely academic pursuits is eroding the extent to which TAFE can be
seen to be distinctive in this way.
Other erosions to the uniqueness of TAFE have, as discussed earlier,
occurred through the increasing private provision of vocational education,
the vocationalisation of secondary education and changes in the nature
of knowledge needed in rapidly changing workplaces. As also indicated
earlier, the focus on adult and continuing education in TAFE has also
been Gradually diminished in an increasingly user-pays approach to non-vocational
courses in TAFE.
Another consequence of the current positioning of TAFE is being locked
into responding to forces which operate to preserve the past (See Figure
1). With its focus on contemporary industry standards, it is more responsive
to enterprises and institutions, regulation and factors of production
than to the demands of -globalisation and post-industrial society; to
such values as the quality of life, inter-personal relationships and the
environment; or to a range of aspirations such as those of the self and
the self in relation to others. Ironically, this singular focus does not
serve industry well, because of qualitative changes in the range of capacities
needed for post-industrial work.
The dilemma is that TAFE represents an enormous public asset and has
a pervasive presence in the community; but the regulatory forces on TAFE
have impaired its capacity to adopt the kind of holistic stance with respect
to knowledge that is required for emerging social and economic circumstances.
There is now a more diverse set of vocational education providers. The
nature of the distinctiveness that could once characterise TAFE has been
eroded. Universities and TAFE sectors now share engagement in mass education,
an emphasis on the development of vocational knowledge and both contest
the same market (school leavers). Universities differ primarily in terms
of the plurality of interests that are addressed and included, the repertoire
of knowledges that are developed, diversity of student population, level
of final qualification and most significantly their role in knowledge
creation rather than transmission.
The scope for preserving totally distinctive providers of vocational
education is reduced; and there is a need for the kind of knowledge developed
by TAFE to include more of the long-term personal needs and aspirations
of students. More focus on lifelong learning is important.
Recommendation 8
Changes in tertiary institutional arrangements should be such that.
- high value continues to be afforded to both practical and theoretical
knowledge
- the knowledge developed for vocational purposes focus primarily
on the needs of individuals in relation to those vocations and the relationships
between that vocation and the advancement of plural societal goals,
both as important contexts for the development of specialised practical
and theoretical knowledge
- special attention is given to the development of critical knowledge
in vocational education
- a renewed focus on adult education and lifelong learning be
focused in TAFE
Conclusions
It is concluded that the nature of a desirable future Australia and
a vision for a productive Australia compel fresh approaches to education
as a whole and vocational education in particular. What is required is
a more holistic view of vocation, affording value to a wider set of knowledges.
The current problems and issues for vocational education derive, in
part, from dated ideas about the nature of production and required vocational
knowledge. Moreover, they are out of kilter with desirable directions
for Australian society as a whole and do not develop the knowledge needed
to contribute to achieving such desired change. Changes in production,
changes in required knowledge, and changes in societal goals as well as
chances that have occurred in the nature and range of Australian educational
activities have eroded the distinctiveness of the mission and role of
Institutes of TAFE. Moreover, the contemporary TAFE focus on vocational
knowledge circumscribes their possible role in lifelong learning.
The required changes necessitate a clear definition of the roles of
Institutes of TAFE and universities. Blurring may be hazardous as TAFE
Institutes place a high value on practical knowledge and provide access
to a diversity of students.
Recommendation 9
Cooperation and collaboration should be encouraged between TAFE
Institutes and universities in order to develop a fuller range of vocational
knowledge, and achieve fuller provision of a diverse range of educational
services across the community Such arrangements should acknowledge a renewed
focus on adult lifelong learning for TAFE in the context of distinctive
roles of TAFEs and universities.
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