Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 24
      EDITH COWAN UNIVERSITY
      Perth, Western Australia
       
      
SUBMISSION TO THE INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES 
        OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
       
      Universities and Institutes of Technical and Further Education have distinctly 
        different, though complementary, missions and should remain separate. 
        In this context, TAFE should not offer degree or associate degree courses 
        and universities should not offer TAFE level courses unless legislated 
        to do so.
      The bridge between the sectors should be via articulation of courses 
        which provides for transfer of students in both directions. Two or three 
        tier awards should be co-operatively developed, with the early stages 
        normally provided by TAFE and the final stages by universities. Each tier 
        of such awards would have its own coherent structure and integrity, and 
        be designed for a particular vocational purpose. Edith Cowan University's 
        joint developments with the Advanced Manufacturing Technologies Centre 
        for the provision of three tiered awards in Applied and Analytical Chemistry 
        and in Food Studies are examples of such courses. The design of TAFE courses 
        specifically for advanced standing in university awards is inappropriate 
        and should be discouraged.
      Other opportunities for extending links between universities and TAFE 
        include:
      (i) Exploiting the advantages of co-location, eg.
       
        Developments of links at Bunbury, Midland and Joondalup campuses.
      
(ii) Joint marketing of courses
       
        The joint marketing of packages of courses, particularly to international 
          students, has mutual benefits.
      
(iii) Co-operation on fee-paying courses and services, eg.
      
        The Maritime Education and Research Alliance jointly developed by South 
          Metro-politan College of TAFE, the University of Western Australia and 
          Edith Cowan University.
      
It is appropriate to make reference to the Australian Qualifications 
        Framework (AQF) and to indicate concerns arising from attempts to incorporate 
        both sectors within the same framework.
      This University, in common with others, uses a wide range of awards not 
        included in the framework. One example is the associate degree. The exclusion 
        of associate degrees from the AQF led the WA Department of Education Services 
        to refuse registration, which prevented these courses being advertised 
        overseas. Such restriction was clearly inappropriate.
      Connections between qualifications in the TAFE sector are difficult to 
        extend to university courses and the suggestion of a continuum between 
        courses offered by TAFE and those offered by universities devalues awards 
        in both sectors. Vertical integration of awards is simply not appropriate 
        in some fields and therefore separate qualification frameworks are proposed. 
        Provision for articulation between the frameworks is important but separation 
        of them acknowledges the distinctive role of each sector.
       
      
      
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