Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 22
      Jim Wellsmore
      
      
INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER 
        EDUCATION
      Submission to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, 
        Education and Training
      22/10/97
       
      
Summary
      While this submission relies on a perspective from within the university 
        sector, it begins from the assertion that there inevitably is a great 
        deal of overlap between the activities of institutes of TAFE and those 
        of universities. Much of the planning of post-school education in Australia 
        has revolved around a hierarchical view of the relationship between TAFE 
        and universities. More recently a view has emerged that it is appropriate 
        and inevitable that the provision of "generalist" education 
        will overlap with that of "vocational" skilling.
      This seems to be understood readily enough by the many people who move 
        between universities and TAFE, enrolling first in one sector and then 
        the other. However, it is important that the relationship between TAFE 
        and universities be understood further before attempts are made at a greater 
        blurring of the distinctions lest this have unintended negative impacts.
      It is important to understand that some of the overlap which already 
        exists between TAFE and universities is being driven by the impact of 
        financial pressures resulting from government policies and the resultant 
        operation of commercial markets. Likewise, TAFE institutes have a commercially 
        driven interest to expand into the offering of based qualifications equivalent 
        to university level degrees.
      The abolition of the earlier binary divide in higher education was achieved 
        through competitive reforms and the creation of new markets within higher 
        education. It is important to point out that the consequences of the introduction 
        of competition has been very damaging both to many of the universities 
        themselves and to the performance of their educational mission. Yet, it 
        is expected that many of the arguments for the reform or abolition of 
        the structural separation between universities and TAFE institutes will 
        rely on assertions about the benefits of competitive efficiencies and 
        educational markets.
      The long established view of the hierarchy between the two sectors no 
        longer can be relied on as the basis for changes to the roles of higher 
        education and TAFE. An attempt to move TAFE "up" in order more 
        closely to replicate the role of universities may be counterproductive.
      Perceptions of status and the impact of the established view of post-compulsory 
        education and training have a created a hierarchy, a vertical stratification 
        of institutions. In terms of the exercise of choice by students, however, 
        there also is evidence that students perceive a more horizontal stratification. 
        There is data which indicates strongly that many people are putting into 
        practice the concept of lifelong learning. Rather than TAFE moving "up" 
        to replicate some of the roles of universities, there may be a clear benefit 
        in universities expanding their role to include more specific vocational 
        skilling. If these were to be made subject to HECS-style regimes this 
        would mitigate the financial barriers to retraining and open up greater 
        possibilities for students to pursue add-on vocational skilling.
      Whilst perceptions of status have resulted in historically different 
        treatment in policy, at present the clearest delineation between the TAFE 
        and university sectors stems from general funding and rules about student 
        financing. In moving to redefine the overlapping roles of TAFE and higher 
        education, the key question for governments must be how and for what each 
        of these two systems is funded for. Without such a policy framework the 
        marketplace will enforce its own system of differentiation between institutions.
      The experience with the Unified National System in higher education is 
        that the abolition of the binary divide as a step towards enhanced competition 
        actually has had the effect of insulating a number of institutions against 
        challenges from those "below". The key issue is whether bringing 
        TAFE into more direct competition with universities, for example through 
        their offering degree level generalist qualifications, will simply increase 
        the vertical differentiation by status. This will see the exercise of 
        student choice become more directed towards the attainment of status rather 
        than of complementary or add-on education.
       
      
Introduction
      This submission concentrates largely on the second of the terms of reference 
        given to the Standing Committee with respect to its Inquiry Into the 
        Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education. Detailed 
        knowledge of the TAFE system lies beyond the expertise of this author 
        and, in any event, it is assumed others more knowledgeable will provide 
        the relevant important information to the Committee.
      This submission, then, concentrates on the extent to which the activities 
        of TAFE institutes do and should overlap with the activities of universities. 
        In particular, it makes significant points about the likely impact on 
        universities of an expanded role for TAFE institutes and suggests, rather, 
        that an alternative course of action might be to explore an expanded role 
        for universities in the provision of vocational education.
      No specific reference is made to vocational education and training (VET) 
        although the submission is informed by the fact that this is provided 
        through a number of avenues other than TAFE. AN outcome sought by some 
        submissions to the Inquiry might seek a greater role for TAFE in the area 
        of VET but this in itself is unlikely to impact on universities.
       
      
The overlap
      While this submission relies on a perspective from within the university 
        sector, it begins from the assertion that there inevitably is a 
        great deal of overlap between the activities of institutes of TAFE and 
        those of universities. Much of the planning of post-school education in 
        Australia has revolved around a hierarchical view of the relationship 
        between TAFE and universities. With the binary divide within higher education 
        (that between the former CAEs and the universities) having been abolished 
        through the Dawkins' "reforms" of the late 80s there has to 
        a large extent been a new divide created in postcompulsory education 
        which supposedly separates TAFE institutes on the one hand and universities 
        on the other. Perceptions of status, educational quality, differences 
        in n-fission and even general levels of resourcing all have arisen from 
        this.
      The debate as to the validity of these perceptions and the distinctions 
        between "generalist" or "liberal" education and "vocational 
        training" broke out into the public domain very early in the life 
        of the present West Review of higher education (see Armitage,1997; Coorey 
        & Ellicot,1997; and Coorey,1997). Yet, as pointed out by the authors 
        of an important recent report :
       
      
"While the boundaries between 'general' and 'vocational' education 
        overlap there is a distinction to be made between general 
        education and vocationally specific education (and) TAFE and higher 
        education share responsibility for both kinds of education" (NBEET, 
        1996:8).
      There are key differences between universities and the TAFE sector. Given 
        that much of the provision of VET takes place outside traditionally recognised 
        centres of learning . perhaps universities regard this area of activity 
        within TAFE as being distinct from the concerns of higher education. On 
        the other hand, it is clear that some forms of knowledge and skills are 
        created as readily in generalist education as in vocational training as 
        in generalist education. So there are key similarities between the two 
        sectors.
      As the authors argue, it is not easy to draw a firm distinction between 
        these educational missions. This seems to be understood readily enough 
        by the many people who move between universities and TAFE, enrolling first 
        in one sector and then the other. It is interesting to view this movement 
        in the context of the commonly held perceptions of TAFE relative to universities. 
        More than half of those students who move between the two sectors first 
        were enrolled in a university before commencing their enrolment in a TAFE 
        institute (NBEET. 1996: 1 0).
      So, the university and TAFE sectors overlap with each other not only 
        in the roles they fill but in the actual provision of educational programs. 
        The relationship between these two sectors already has outgrown a rigid 
        structural divide. However, it is important that the relationship be understood 
        further before attempts are made at a greater blurring of the distinctions 
        between TAFE and universities. The concern must be that a further driving 
        together of these distinct systems does not have unintended negative impacts.
       
      
Commercial factors
      It is important to understand that some of the overlap which already 
        exists between TAFE and universities is being driven by the operation 
        of markets. The specific impact of reductions in per student funding to 
        higher education has combined with more general policy settings on the 
        part of the Commonwealth to increase not only the reliance of universities 
        on private sources of revenue but also the proportion of total income 
        derived from such sources (see DEET, 1996:12; Marginson, 1997:9). Thus, 
        the commercialisation of educational programs, even the outright privatisation 
        of areas of institutions (see Wellsmore, 1997:5), is regarded as vital 
        to the relative "success" of various universities.
      In this competitive commercial environment the pressures are strong for 
        universities to move more formally into areas of vocational training. 
        Beyond the measure of vocational skilling inherent in university education 
        (as discussed above), individual institutions are pushing into areas of 
        VET, industry certifications and so on in pursuit of student markets and 
        revenue. For example, Macquarie University offers on a fee-paying basis 
        to non-award students such programs as the Certificate of Superannuation 
        Management and the Professional Development Program in Conveyancing. 
        Through its commercial relationship with the Sydney Institute of Business 
        and Technology the University also is committed to the delivery of an 
        Advanced Certificate program, equivalent to a TAFE qualification, 
        in areas like accounting, business studies, computing and marketing.
      A similar environment has been created in the technical and further education 
        sector which in many areas has been commercialised to a greater extent 
        than universities. Again this has arisen through a combination of funding 
        mechanisms and broad policy settings. Further blurring the popularly perceived 
        distinction between the two systems, then, has been the commercially driven 
        interest for TAFE to expand into the offering of based qualifications 
        equivalent to university level degrees.
      The abolition of the earlier binary divide in higher education was achieved 
        through competitive reforms and the creation of new markets within higher 
        education (see Marginson, 1997). This will be taken up in greater detail 
        later in this submission. It is enough to point out, however, that the 
        consequences of the introduction of competition, unintended or unstated, 
        were very damaging both to many of the universities themselves and to 
        the performance of their educational mission.
      Yet, it is expected that many of the arguments for the reform or abolition 
        of the structural separation between universities and TAFE institutes 
        will rely on assertions about the benefits of competitive efficiencies 
        and educational markets. It is not appropriate for this submission to 
        comment on the educational benefits which might arise from a less rigid 
        barrier between university level and nonuniversity level qualifications 
        (for example see NBEET,1996). However, it seems important to draw attention 
        to the point that in order to achieve such benefits a method might be 
        found which relies more on educational planning than competitive economic 
        behaviour.
       
      
The significance of credit transfer
      While student markets have become central to the provision of higher 
        education and have attracted universities to the provision, on a fee-paying 
        basis, of TAFE level qualifications, this has not long been the driving 
        force for greater articulation. The operation of credit transfer has become 
        a much debated educational issue since the initiation of the Dawkins' 
        "reforms". Credit transfer was presented within those reforms 
        as an equity measure over Within those reforms improved credit transfer 
        arrangements were viewed as much a mechanism for improved equity outcomes 
        within education as a means for improved efficiency (Dawkins, 1987:22,38).
      That view of credit transfer and articulation relied on a hierarchical 
        relationship between the higher education and TAFE sectors. The existence 
        of a more complex relationship is evidenced by the fact that most people 
        who have moved from one sector to the other first were enrolled in a university.
      The study which produced those figures showed evidence for a broad acceptance 
        on the part of students (irrespective of which sector they first had been 
        enrolled in) of universities playing an important role in the formation 
        of generic skills (NBEET,1996:29). Whilst staff were more divided, again 
        there was a broad acceptance that TAFE institutions generally do not have 
        as a focus the forination of generic skills.
      The import of these findings is that the long established view of the 
        hierarchy between the two sectors no longer can be relied on as the basis 
        for changes to the roles of higher education and TAFE. To the extent that 
        student demand can and does shape educational delivery, it is significant 
        that students themselves have demonstrated the value of generic learning 
        being supplemented by specific vocational skills. Further application 
        of the inter-sectoral hierarchy, in effect an attempt to move TAFE "up" 
        in order more closely to replicate the role of universities, may be counterproductive 
        as a result.
       
      
Movement between sectors
      Student demand is not a simple construction, there are many factors which 
        influence educational choice. Although, in an educational system increasingly 
        dominated by user-pays mechanisms, competition tends more and more to 
        be economic in character, as Marginson (1997) explains in essence students 
        are competing for positional advantage. Whilst avoiding any discourse 
        about the educational ramifications of this construction it can be said 
        that within the present systems of post-compulsory education students 
        at least have a clear picture of what type of programs are offered, what 
        they can expect within those programs and in which institutions to find 
        them.
      Perceptions of status and the impact of the established view of post-compulsory 
        education and training have a created a hierarchy, a vertical stratification 
        of institutions. In terms of the exercise of choice, however, there also 
        is evidence that students perceive a more horizontal stratification. The 
        extent of movement between the sectors of TAFE and university indicates 
        that, rather than moving upwards from lower to higher status, students 
        are interested in gaining an appropriate mixture of skills and qualifications.
      The significant factor in student movement between the sectors is that 
        those initially enrolled in a university later move to TAFE in 
        order to gain particular skills and those initially enrolled in a TAFE 
        institution proceed to a university in order to gain a qualification (NBEET, 
        1996:15). Student demand for these different aspects of post-compulsory 
        education is underpinned further by the fact that most transferees previously 
        have completed at least one qualification in the sector where they initially 
        enrolled (NBEET, 1996:76-77). The NBEET study also indicates that graduates 
        do not necessarily move immediately from one sector to the other.
      This data is a strong indicator that many people are putting into practice 
        the concept of lifelong learning. It has been argued elsewhere, and is 
        accepted for the purposes of this submission, that the real barrier to 
        repeated participation in education, whether as a continuous experience 
        or as retraining, is an economic one, particularly in the form of user-pays 
        mechanisms. As noted above, universities have begun to pursue TAFE level 
        vocational programs for commercial reasons - they are fees based. Likewise, 
        many of the programs offered by TAFE institutes are fees based. However, 
        rather than TAFE moving "up" to replicate some of the roles 
        of universities, there may be a clear benefit in universities expanding 
        their role to include more specific vocational skilling. If these were 
        to be made subject to HECS-style regimes broadly applying to undergraduate 
        study in universities this would mitigate the financial barriers for retraining 
        and open up greater possibilities for students to pursue add-on vocational 
        skilling.
       
      
The impact of competition
      Whilst perceptions of status have resulted in historically different 
        treatment in policy, at present the clearest delineation between the TAFE 
        and university sectors stems from general funding and rules about student 
        financing. This submission anticipates that the driving force for a greater 
        overlap between the two sectors will be competitive commercial pressures 
        as a smokescreen for lower financial commitments from government. Such 
        a course could only have the effect of increasing the importance of status 
        to the performance of each sector and the individual institutions which 
        comprise them.
      The authors of the NBEET report stressed that numerous studies indicate 
        the importance of context specific knowledge in the use of expert skills. 
        The point was made that this highlights the importance of discipline based 
        learning because:
       
      
"(it is) not that the formation of knowledge can be substituted 
        for the formation of generic
      competencies, but that each needs the other" (1996:19-20).
      However, in moving to redefine the overlapping roles of TAFE and higher 
        education, the key question for governments must be how and for what each 
        of these two systems is funded for. If, for the purposes of decisions 
        about policy and resourcing, TAFE institutes are to regarded as indistinguishable 
        from universities it is clear that the marketplace will enforce its own 
        system of differentiation between institutions. Since perceptions about 
        status will continue to influence the operation of the market, greater 
        direct competition between universities and institutes will replace the 
        constraints of structure with the limitations of less formal inefficiencies.
      How well will a group of hybrid TAFE-universities be regarded? How will 
        they be expected to compete with the established universities? How will 
        students differentiate between the vocational focus of the TAFE system 
        and the more generalist character of the universities? These very same 
        questions arose with the abolition of the previous binary divide in higher 
        education yet have never been successfully answered. Ten years after the 
        abolition of the CAE sector the fundamental problem remains of institutions 
        attempting to sustain the research essential to degree level teaching 
        when they receive so little research funding in comparison to the older 
        universities.
      The data on student movement does not suggest there is any relative shortage 
        of degree level generalist programs within post-school education. It is 
        the mixed generalist/vocational courses offered by TAFE that are experiencing 
        the greater demand. The NBEET study authors noted a concern that the movement 
        of university graduates to TAFE might have the effect of crowding out 
        school leaver TAFE entrants (1996:1 1). There should be considerable concern 
        at the validity of a strategy to introduce further competitive pressures 
        to higher education specifically, and post-school education generally, 
        if this is to be implemented simply through TAFE institutes moving toward 
        a greater level of provision of degree level programs.
      The experience with the Unified National System in higher education is 
        that the abolition of the binary divide as a step towards enhanced competition 
        actually has had the effect of insulating a number of institutions against 
        challenges from those "below" (see Marginson,1997:13). Rather 
        than meritocratic reforms, which would have introduced the best aspects 
        of the CAE sector directly to all universities, competitive reform reinforced 
        the relative position of the stronger and higher status institutions at 
        the expense of the rest.
      In considering the effect of reform on students and their educational 
        choices the key issue is whether bringing TAFE into more direct competition 
        with universities, for example through offering degree level generalist 
        qualifications, will simply increase the vertical distance across which 
        institutions are spread. Since, in any case, the significant competition 
        is between students on the basis of positional advantage, will post-compulsory 
        education become more stratified and the relatively elite position of 
        universities be strengthened further?
      All this has financial and resource implications for TAFE institutions 
        in a scenario of direct competition with universities. It also poses significant 
        dangers for a university sector already stratified by perceptions of status 
        should the introduction of TAFE institutes further widen the gap between 
        the "elite" and the remainder of the system. The impact on students 
        will be a muddling of their educational choices. The present horizontal 
        aspect of student movement will be replaced by a more vertical competition 
        for status. The educational market, as opposed to that based on status, 
        will work less effectively because it will become less clear where students 
        can find particular vocational skilling as distinct from generalist education 
        and vice versa. There will be an increase in the number of institutions 
        identified in the market place as second and even third class and the 
        exercise of student choice will become more directed towards the attainment 
        of status rather than complementary or add-on education.
       
      
Conclusion
      The type of education provided by TAFE institutes has a value which is 
        not only intrinsic but is recognised by students, including graduates 
        from universities. Almost paradoxically but as a result of government 
        policy settings, an increasing factor in the overlap between TAFE and 
        universities is the viability of providing specifically vocational skills 
        on a commercial basis. The extension of the activities of the university 
        sector to include more TAFE level vocational education could, if supported 
        by appropriate changes to Commonwealth policy, see these provided on a 
        HECS-liable basis and thus have the effect of increasing access. On the 
        other hand, bringing TAFE institutes into more direct competition with 
        universities, since this likely will mean more widespread commercial offerings 
        of degree level programs, seems to threaten significant detrimental effects 
        on both sectors.
       
      
References
      Armitage, C. 1997, "Review chief rejects vocational courses" 
        in The Australian 16/1/97 p. I
      Coorey, M. 1997, "Double-dip students prove TAFE and uni go together" 
        in The Australian 17/1/97 p.2
      Coorey, M. & Ellicot, J. 1997, "West outdated on training, 
        say academics" in The Australian 16/1/97 p.4
      Dawkins, J. 1987, Higher Education: A 12olicy discussion pal2er, 
        AGPS
      DEET 1996, "Diversity in Australian Higher Education Institutions, 
        1994" in Higher Education Series Report No.26, Higher 
        Education Division
      Marginson, S. 1997, "Competition and contestability in 
        Australian higher education, 1987-1997' in Australian Universities' 
        Review, vol. 40. no. I
      NBEET 1996, Chan2ina Context. Movin2 Skills : Generic Skills in the 
        Context of Credit Transfer and the Reco2nition of Prior Learning, 
        National Board of Employment Education and Training, May
      Wellsmore, J. 1997, "Markets in Higher Education : The Balance 
        Between Public and Private Investment", submitted to the Journal 
        of Australian Political EcongDy October 1997
      
      
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