Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 9
      BENDIGO REGIONAL INSTITUTE OF TAFE
      RESPONSE TO THE INQUIRY INTO APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF 
        TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
      by the
      STANDING COMMITTEE ON EMPLOYMENT, EDUCATION AND TRAINING
      which is tasked to inquire into and report on
      - the appropriate roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education: 
        and
      - the extent to which those roles overlap with Universities.
       
      
 
      INTRODUCTION
      TAFE Institutes emerged as discrete identities after 1974. In the remainder 
        of the 70's and then through the 80's TAFE'S market could be readily identified 
        as that large sector of education and training not covered by either Secondary 
        Colleges or University Education. During this period TAFE developed national 
        products specifically designed to meet the needs for industry skill requirements 
        ranging from the skilled operative to line and middle management. During 
        the eighties the TAFE product was expressed in outcomes for trade training, 
        certificates and associate diplomas. Concurrent with this provision and, 
        as a result of expertise gained in the development and delivery of these 
        programs, TAFE also was able to address the training demands of many other 
        community service sectors, eg.
      
        Corrections
        Long term unemployed
        Early school leavers
        Mature age re-entry
        Students at risk etc.
      
This experience gave TAFE a mature product that has now been successfully 
        marketed to corporate clients and to the much wider global market. Any 
        changes envisaged to the system should recognise this value added contribution 
        to the training system by TAFE Institutes. It is recognised that there 
        is growing interaction and competition between Universities and TAFE Institutes. 
        This is due to an upward expansion by TAFE as it meets industry demand, 
        via ITAB submissions, for more people to be trained with both skiH outcomes 
        and line management functions and a downward expansion by Universities 
        to keep a stable market share and to formalise an endeavour by the University 
        sector to be seen to have a "hands on capability".
      The prime role for TAFE is to deliver education and training in response 
        to the emerging and constantly changing VET system. The shelf life of 
        many of the skills imparted to TAFE clients is as little as (3) three 
        years. It is therefore incumbent on the TAFE system to be aware of and 
        able to adapt to these rapid changes as the need arises. Being able to 
        meet these changing needs means that it is implicit that TAFE be in a 
        position to liaise both directly and indirectly with those industries 
        which are reflected in their program profile base.
      Accordingly, TAFE values its close alliance with the corporate sector 
        and each TAFE Institution must be in a position to measure the needs of 
        local industry so that the program profile can be negotiated to fit identified 
        needs. This alliance has meant that each TAFE Institute takes a lead role 
        in communicating government policy or training and education to its local 
        industry sector. This point is evidenced by TAFE's involvement in the 
        New Apprenticeship and VET in Schools thrusts. It is these critical links 
        with the corporate sector that readily identifies and defines the scope 
        of TAFE Institutes within the VET system.
       
      
THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF FURTHER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION.
      The historical snapshot sketched out in the introduction provides a chronological 
        picture of the evolved and evolved TAFE role. The options for TAFE in 
        the future can be delineated into three prime scenarios. These are:
      1. Subsume TAFE delivery into schools and Universities.
      2. Clearly define and support the role for a strengthened TAFE system 
        to enable it to continue to contribute to the skilling of Australia.
      3. A proposal that would see the TAFE sector somewhere between the first 
        two scenarios, that is the current position.
      In dealing with the first scenario it is difficult to see the potential 
        benefits it offers while it is simple to define the potential loss, that 
        is the symbiotic relationship that has been established between TAFE and 
        the corporate sector. This relationship would be very difficult to sustain 
        in such a scenario. If the role of TAFE is to be narrowed in the future 
        as both Secondary Colleges and Universities edge into the mainstream training 
        sector of trade training at one end and middle level diplomas at the other 
        end, then the expertise held by the TAFE system will be narrowed accordingly. 
        The narrowing of this base would seriously corrupt the ability of TAFE 
        Institutes to meet their community service obligations. For example it 
        appears highly improbable that a Secondary College of the future will 
        be able to effectively service the needs of students in correctional facilities 
        or students at risk. Equally improbable is the scenario of Universities 
        assisting early school leavers or the long term unemployed.
      It appears that the TAFE sector has effectively identified and developed 
        a niche market. In serving that market it has developed all of the skills 
        and management processes required to efficiently meet a wide variety of 
        community obligations, while at the same time developing a product that 
        is the envy of its global competitors.
      The second scenario calls for a strengthening and clarification of existing 
        TAFE roles which should leave the potential customer with a clear understanding 
        of responsibilities within the higher education sector. Such a scenario 
        would enable the TAFE sector to pursue its prime focus of:
      
        - provision of employment oriented entry level vocational education 
          and training including New Apprenticeships.
        - provision of re-skilling education and training as dictated by technological 
          change.
        - provision of middle level vocational training that is clearly employment 
          outcome oriented.
        - provision of "second chance" training for those at need 
          or at risk.
        - provision of interventionalist skill based training for the corporate 
          sector.
      
In doing so TAFE Institutes will be in a position to further mature and 
        develop their products so that they can continue to value add to the economy 
        by decreasing their dependence on government sourced income.
      The third scenario maintains the current positions of ambiguity and consequently 
        supports duplication of services across the sectors.
      If the roles were to be clearly defined, there would be no evidence of 
        the overlap and consequent duplication that currently occurs.
       
      
 
      THE EXTENT TO WHICH THOSE ROLES OVERLAP WITH UNIVERSITIES.
      As both sectors of higher education actively compete for the same cohort 
        of potential students there is a misconception that this competition is 
        due to overlap in provision. In reality it is a manifestation of the entitlement 
        of potential students to choose which sector, University or TAFE, will 
        provide the client with their desired outcomes. The prospect of positive 
        employment outcomes as a result of undertaking a TAFE program has led 
        to TAFE Institutions increasing their market share of this cohort of potential 
        students.
      Where overlap does exist in program delivery it is being dealt with by 
        articulation procedures. Unfortunately these articulation processes and 
        procedures are not nationally consistent. This is evidenced in existing 
        articulation and credit arrangements between Universities and TAFE Institutions. 
        Unfortunately this has led to a plethora of inconsistent levels of recognition. 
        The OTFE publication PATHWAYS '97 highlights many of these inconsistencies. 
        TAFE Institutes currently respond to national curricula driven by the 
        Australian Recognition Framework (ARF) and ITAB's representing Industry 
        needs, that is, TAFE has a standard product. This product is not recognised 
        by Universities as a standard and accordingly attracts different levels 
        of credit by different Universities for the same Bachelor Degree. This 
        paradox needs to be overcome before the system can be considered to be 
        reasonably transparent to the client.
      Bendigo Regional Institute of TAFE firmly believes that there is not 
        only enough room within the market for both sectors, but there are in 
        fact two distinct markets to serve. The University sector has a market 
        segment which has been long established. TAFE's market is an ever changing 
        target, as it should be, if it truly reflects industry needs. As TAFE 
        moves to meet these needs there will be a feeling from some quarters that 
        TAFE has moved into its own sector. In this reality it is the movement 
        by the corporate sector - not TAFE.
      
      
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