Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors
		
        
Submission 32
       
      
      
SUBMISSION FROM THE QUEENSLAND NURSING COUNCIL
      
      
22 October 1997
      to the INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL 
        AND FURTHER EDUCATION
      
 
      The Queensland Nursing Council
      The Queensland Nursing Council, as a statutory authority is responsible 
        for the regulation of nurse education in the State of Queensland. The 
        Council has a legislative role to assure the people of Queensland and 
        the nursing profession that nurse education courses which lead to registration, 
        enrolment or endorsement have the potential to prepare nurses to engage 
        in safe and competent practice.
       
      
 
      The profession of nursing
      Nursing practice is carried out by nurses at two levels in Queensland. 
        The first professional level of nurses' educational preparation is at 
        the undergraduate level with the exit qualification of a three year degree. 
        Undergraduate programs are structured to enable students to link academic 
        learning with `off campus' clinical experiences. Students are required 
        to develop technical, -communication, problem-solving, critical independent 
        thinking and clinical judgment skills in preparation for their practice 
        role as registered nurses.
      The second level nurse, the enrolled nurse is licensed to provide patient-centred 
        nursing care under the supervision of a registered nurse and as such the 
        role of the enrolled nurse is complementary to the registered nurse. In 
        recognition of the enrolled nurse's role, the Queensland Nursing Council 
        has been supportive of the transfer of enrolled nurse preparatory education 
        to the tertiary sector in five institutes of technical and further education 
        in Queensland at the award level of diploma.
       
      
 
      Role of institutes of technical and further education in nurse education
      The Queensland Nursing Council considers that institutes of technical 
        and further education are able to provide appropriate educational preparation 
        for enrolled nurses. It is of paramount importance that technical and 
        further education institutes be appropriately staffed and resourced to 
        enable the education that is to be provided to be of a quality standard. 
        The teachers of students of nursing not only require experience as nurse 
        practitioners, but appropriate skills and educational qualifications for 
        the role of an educator within the tertiary sector.
      In light of the projected changes to role and functions of the enrolled 
        nurse and the impact of technological advances on the delivery of health 
        care and in particular on nursing care; it is essential that enrolled 
        nurses have access to continuing education post-graduation. Given the 
        role of the institutes of technical and further education in preparatory 
        enrolled nurse education, it Would be appropriate that provisions be made 
        to continue the educational service to enrolled nurses post-graduation.
       
       
      
Extent of overlap between institutes of technical and further education 
        and university sector
      In recognition that enrolled nurses may choose to seek entrance to nurse 
        education in the university sector; it is appropriate that processes be 
        established for the acknowledgment of the qualification that was obtained 
        at the diploma or post-diploma level in the tertiary sector. Similarly, 
        as nursing students who have undertaken part of a university pre-registration 
        course may seek enrolment in a diploma course in the institute of technical 
        and further education sector, processes need to be established to facilitate 
        recognition of the student's prior -learning and provision of appropriate 
        credit.
      Thus the articulation between the university and institutes of technical 
        and further education needs to be of a reciprocal nature. All seven universities 
        conducting pre-registration undergraduate nurse education in Queensland 
        have policies in place for assessing student's prior learning, it is understood 
        that prospective nursing students in institutes of technical and further 
        education must initially enrol in the education program and demonstrate 
        competency prior to a determination regarding the awarding of any credit 
        for prior learning.
       
      
 
      SUMMARY
      The Queensland Nursing Council considers the role of institutes of 
        technical and further education in the delivery of nurse education to 
        be:
      
        • as providers of preparatory education for students wishing to register 
          as enrolled nurses
        • as requiring to ensure that staff involved in the education of enrolled 
          nurses must have appropriate nursing and teaching qualifications
        • as requiring appropriate and sufficient resources to enable the preparatory 
          education to be delivered by flexible mode delivery
        • as providers of continuing education for enrolled nurses' needs.
      
The Queensland Nursing Council considers that the extent of overlap 
        between institutes of technical and further education should include:
      
        • the establishment of reciprocal processes for granting access 
          to credit or recognition of prior learning for previous for study undertaken 
          at both in the University sector and within the technical institutes 
          of further education.
      
        
      
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