Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 27
      SUBMISSION From Professor Sandra Humphrey Executive Chair Central West 
        Area Consultative Committee
      The most significant role that institutes of technical and further education 
        should play is that of offering universal education. Significant numbers 
        of any given community have the ability to access institutes of technical 
        and further education to satisfy a range of educational requirements. 
        Included in this is the provision of literacy classes offered to students 
        unable to read and write, migrants, and those students who undertake further 
        education courses. As the House of Representatives Standing Committee 
        on Employment, Education and Training would be aware, literacy poses one 
        of the greatest significant obstacles to employment, across all age groups. 
        Accessibility of literacy classes must be a major focus of institutes 
        of technical and further education because of the belief that such institutes 
        are community based.
      Further to this such organisations should be at the forefront of vocational 
        education. The scope of vocational education is extensive, and includes:
      
        - trade based learning;
- apprenticeship and traineeship learning;
- school to work transition pathways, ie, JSST;
- para professional studies - marketing: accounting, HR, business services, 
          administration etc; and
- Information technology.
Institutes of technical and further education must also continue to offer 
        'steppingstone' learning to the community. Included here is retraining/reskilling 
        opportunities, preparatory courses for entering/reentering the workforce, 
        second chance education/training and matriculation opportunities. It has 
        been widely suggested that students who have undertaken matriculation 
        studies for the purposes of university entrance are very well equipped 
        to successfully complete university study.
      Their research skills, time management and organisational skills are 
        of a high standard and they are well grounded in 'learning mode'.
      A specific focus should also include, skills/training and work ethic 
        development for the unemployed. Institutes of technical and further education 
        are well resourced to offer this service because of the wide range of 
        other -services they provide and because of their community focus.
      Issues of access and equity have also been addressed by institutes of 
        technical and further education and this is why it is imperative that 
        their role continues to focus on a whole of community approach.
      It is necessary for technical and further education institutes to become 
        more industry responsive and to do this they must continually seek advice 
        and guidance from industry. The information super highway demands this, 
        if these institutes are to succeed in the training provider market they 
        must be Industry responsive.
      It is also crucial that institutes of technical and further education 
        become regionally responsive, most notably so for rural Australian. Regionally 
        based institutes need to develop strategies that include mobile training 
        units. With the Government's New Apprenticeship policy institutes of technical 
        and further education, if they desire to be at the forefront of apprenticeship 
        training, will need to respond in an innovative way. As quoted in the 
        New Apprenticeships Local Area Marketing Kit, 'New Apprenticeships are 
        about developing a simpler, more relevant training system that is responsive 
        to the needs of users and improves the bottom line profitabIlity of business', 
        (Section 2, page 3). Flexible delivery of courses should also remain a 
        priority.
      Technical and further education institutes must also play a significant 
        role in school to work transition programs. Policies on RPL and accreditation 
        must be finely tuned, relevant, responsive and up-to-date. A continued 
        focus on vocational guidance and careers advice should also be a priority 
        and resourced adequately.
       
      
The extent to which those roles should ovei1ap with Universities
      With reference to this, resource-sharing policies should be developed 
        so that resources such as staff, facilities, equipment, technology and 
        co-campus establishment can be shared. With the advent of accreditation 
        the distinction between institutes of technical and further education 
        and universities is becoming less defined. This needs to continue so that 
        'stepping-stone' learning and career pathway development can be further 
        enhanced.
      With the introduction of HECS and now up front university fees, institutes 
        of technical and further education must reassess their roles so that they 
        are able to continue to offer current services and services that will 
        respond to the move towards further full fee paying university courses.
      As a community based service provider, institutes of technical and further 
        education need to retain their equity and access policies in regards to 
        universality of learning.
      There are a number of issues I would like to raise which I believe need 
        to be addressed in the provision of TAFE:
      a) The interface programs between TAFEs and universities where TAFE students 
        pay minimal fees and university students incur significant HECs charges. 
        One must question, in an era of facilitated credit transfer, why TAFE 
        students are exempted from HECs. Also, income differentials between TAFE 
        and university graduates is narrowing.
      b) The movement away from curriculum to training packages in the TAFE 
        sector does offer flexibility but is this at the expense of structured 
        learning and skills development? Mature age students with prior post secondary 
        educational experience can cope better than those with little or no experience 
        or those with undetected learning difficulties.
      
The effectiveness of training packages should be carefully monitored.
      c) Self-regulated accreditation and provider registration does facilitate 
        quick response, but without adequate monitoring can compromise quality. 
        Many private providers believe the monitoring by regulatory authorities 
        is inadequate. Because TAFE has accreditation processes (which could be 
        streamlined), it is often labelled unresponsive. The need for balance 
        to ensure quality and relevant programs is still a challenge for TAFE.
      d) TAFE also needs to consider its responsibilities to rural and regional 
        Australia. There is a tendency by TAFE to abandon training in small centres 
        and require students/employers to fit into the TAFE mould. This is proving 
        cost prohibitive, especially with travel costs and absences from employment. 
        TAFE needs to be more innovative in the delivery of apprenticeship/traineeship 
        and other skills programs in remote and regional areas. Better information 
        sharing between TAFE's on innovations and best practice may assist. The 
        result is that many small regional centres have a shortage of skilled 
        workers, especially in the trades and industry is inhibited from locating 
        and/or expanding in rural centres. Bartters Chickens in the Riverina and 
        Changeurs Wool Processors at Wagga Wagga are examples of businesses that 
        have grate difficulty getting training relevant to their operations. This 
        means local unemployed do not got work opportunities because they are 
        not skilled.
      e) TAFE also faces unfair competition through curriculum development. 
        It generally bears from its budgets the costs for developing accredited 
        curriculum and training packages. Private providers, I understand, get 
        access to these packages on a without cost basis. In an increasingly competitive 
        market, the questions of intellectual property and copyright need to be 
        addressed. If it is considered reasonable that public funds be used to 
        develop such packages and these be freely available to providers, either 
        public or private, then the funding of such should be separated 
        from TAFE budgets and overheads. Also, employment conditions and remuneration 
        of TAFE staff reduce its competitiveness with the private sector or even 
        the Community Colleges and Group Training Companies.
      f) The Central West ACC has found that TAFE is the major resource for 
        training in the region. The Community College and Central West Group Apprentices 
        also provide a valuable role. Private provider provision is still small 
        and given the dispersed population, will not be a significant player in 
        the near future. The Director of the Western Institute of TAFE is a member 
        of the ACC and does get feedback. However, the dependency on TAFE in rural 
        Australia does mean that it needs to be adequately resourced and in turn, 
        demonstrate its preparedness to respond to employer and communlty needs. 
        The ongoing state of restructuring in NSW has inhibited TAFE's effectiveness 
        and has seen instability in staffing and its mission. This had reduced 
        its profile and ability to outreach to its communities.
I would be pleased to expand further.
      Professor Sandra Humphrey
      
      
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