Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors
		
      
Submission 28
      WESTERN AUSTRALIAN ACADEMY OF PERFORMING ARTS
      Edith Cowan University
       
      
re: Inquiry into the Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical 
        and Further Education
      I would like to respond to your inquiry regarding
       
      
• the appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further 
        education; and
         • the extent to which those roles should overlap with universities.
The Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts is a provider of both 
        TAFE-level and higher education programmes. It is one of the very few 
        institutions within Australia that has managed to achieve a seamless integration 
        between the two educational sectors. Students at the Academy are taught 
        according to their skill level and the educational demands of the curriculum. 
        Where the curriculum allows, students from both sectors attend the same 
        classes, particularly in performance.
      The Academy's position is that
      (a) the seamless integration of educational programmes provides a better 
        education and training environment, promotes networking and allows for 
        more efficient delivery; [Figure I: Educational Integration Model not 
        reproduced]
      (b) the educational sectors can develop their collaborative and cooperative 
        efforts further to promote a better training environment for students 
        whilst at the same time maintaining the distinctive differences which 
        are fundamental to the orientation and values of each sector;
      (c) the obstacles to collaboration and cooperative delivery models are
      
        - the perception which has been created by the Australian Qualifications 
          Framework that the sectors provide programmes on a single continuum 
          - this thinking is fundamentally flawed and creates an "elitist" 
          philosophy rather than an "appropriate training" model 
        
- the divide which is created through discrete funding of each sector. 
      
The integrated training model which has been developed by the Academy 
        is a healthy model which promotes movement and cooperation between the 
        sectors. The quality of outcome which has been achieved by the Academy's 
        programmes in both the VET and the higher education sectors is validation 
        of the training environment which has been created. Students with a performance 
        orientation emerge from the Academy's VET Diploma. programmes into a successful 
        professional career in the arts and entertainment industry. Students with 
        more of an academic orientation benefit from the performance environment 
        which is created and emerge also into the profession, but with opportunity 
        to develop their careers at some later stage into other areas which can 
        be extended by their own efforts or further study.
      I am grateful for the opportunity to comment on these models for your 
        inquiry, as I believe there are many disturbing trends emerging within 
        the education sector which are motivated more by issues of self-preservation 
        and separatism than by educational philosophy and values.
      Yours sincerely,
      Geoffrey G Gibbs
      DIRECTOR
      
        
      
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