Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 34
      THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
      SUBMISSION TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STANDING COMMITTEE FOR EMPLOYMENT 
        EDUCATION AND TRAINING
       
      
INQUIRY INTO:
       THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
       THE EXTENT TO WHICH THOSE ROLES SHOULD OVERLAP WITH UNIVERSITIES
         
      1997
       
      1 Preamble
      In recent years, TAFE has emerged as a major instrument of Government 
        policy at both State and Federal level. Increasingly, it has been viewed 
        as indispensable to the creation and extension of a trained, versatile 
        and innovative workforce. A significant rise in demand for education and 
        training has been caused in large measure by:
      
        • a recognition that a highly skilled workforce is needed to increase 
          Australia's competitiveness in international markets;
        • an increasing need for people to change jobs, even professions, several 
          times in their lifetime. The pace of technological change is such that 
          the very jobs for which students are being prepared will either disappear 
          or be substantially transformed. The economic climate of change and 
          uncertainty and technological innovation are increasing the importance 
          of individual flexibility and ability to learn on the job as a condition 
          of entering employment as well as remaining productive and employable.
      
Clearly, graduates need a core of professional, vocational or technical 
        skills as appropriate to their career choices and aspirations. Equally 
        clear is that a narrow specialist education, focused too exclusively on 
        a slender range of employment opportunities, will be disadvantageous to 
        graduates who may have to negotiate several career changes in their working 
        life. Vocational courses offered through TAFE will be increasingly concerned 
        with competencies that are more general than those which, for example, 
        characterised the traditional craft-based apprenticeships. Industry restructuring 
        involving changes to the nature and scope of work will have major effects 
        on TAFE vocational courses, including placing greater emphases on conceptual 
        learning, technological literacy and common skills across trades. Across-discipline 
        combinations of courses will be necessary, producing people trained in 
        multi-skill areas. Courses will be presented in industry groups rather 
        than in narrow occupations. I-earning to learn skills will also need to 
        be developed.
      A significant challenge for educators and teachers in all sectors is 
        to equip people with broad-based skills which provide mobility and flexibility 
        in life, adjust capacity to new types of work organisation and enable 
        participation in a learning society. Thus the objectives for teaching 
        and learning for both the TAFE and higher education sectors appear to 
        be similar. Both individual and industry needs are leading to a stronger 
        convergence of general and vocational education.
      Although these needs call attention to stronger collaboration between 
        the education sectors, this does not present a case for a single institutional 
        form of tertiary education. A key point made in the University of Adelaide's 
        submission to the West Review of Higher Education, Financing and Policy 
        is that "Australia, if it is to secure an economic future which will 
        allow it to maintain a relatively good position in what is an increasingly 
        global economy, is critically dependent on the rapid development of knowledge-intensive 
        industries as a nation, we need to invest in the creation of both knowledge 
        and a well and appropriately educated population. It is in this context 
        that the task of considering the design of the higher education system 
        needs to be placed."
      The point to be emphasised is that, far from seeking to blur the distinction 
        between TAFE and Higher Education, our governments should be seeking to 
        encourage greater diversity in the provision of systematic post secondary 
        education and training. It needs to be recognised that students can properly 
        achieve tertiary awards by different means and at different levels of 
        accomplishment, and that different levels and kinds of tertiary study 
        have their own validity. Unless universities and institutions of technical 
        and further education work out carefully what the nature of their economy-service 
        courses should be, a major risk to the nation is the production of graduates 
        who are equipped with neither adequate practical/technical skills nor 
        a substantial understanding of the related theoretical disciplines.
       
       
      
2 TAFE and higher education
      While not denying that there is overlap in the respective missions of 
        the sectors, there is a need for stronger recognition of the different 
        objectives of university and vocational education and training.
      The principle domain of TAFE could be regarded as covering all of vocational 
        education, including a substantial area of overlap with general education. 
        TAFE encompasses four main areas: preparatory education and training for 
        early school leavers, initial vocational education and training, further 
        training subsequent to an initial qualification, and recreational or adult 
        education. TAFE graduates are expected to have a deep knowledge of a technical 
        speciality and demonstrate good communication skills as well as a logical 
        approach to problem analysis and decision-making.
      The University of Adelaide's mission reflects what Adelaide holds to 
        be the principal purposes of a university:
       
      
The Mission of The University of Adelaide is to advance knowledge, 
        understanding and culture through scholarship, research, teaching and 
        community service of international distinction.
      Key objectives include:
      
        the education of appropriately qualified Australians to enable them 
          to make profound contribution to the intellectual, cultural, economic 
          and social development of local and national communities as well as 
          international regions. Of fundamental importance is that the teaching 
          programs provide an advanced liberal (or general) education for all 
          students. Emphasis on theory and higher-order skill development is the 
          speciality of higher education where graduates should have the ability 
          to use the major modes of inquiry relevant to a given discipline; be 
          able to demonstrate strong communication skills; be able to recognise 
          high quality professional practice; be able to conduct self-directed 
          learning and show an inclination towards lifelong learning;
      
the creation and advancement of knowledge. The activities of teaching 
        and research inform each other. Teaching includes both general or liberal 
        education and specialised theoretical and practical studies. The teachingand 
        research work of a university includes a range of the kinds of vocational 
        studies that depend on a significant body of theory for understanding 
        and practice. Universities offer a wide range of teaching programs at 
        undergraduate and postgraduate levels. The latter are particularly concerned 
        with the development of advanced knowledge and of skills in scholarship 
        and research. The ultimate aim is the creation of knowledge, the application 
        of which is to the betterment of communities in Australia and overseas.
      If it can be concluded that there are some distinctive characteristics 
        of a university, what then is the optimum role for TAFE in the broader 
        sphere of post compulsory education provision and how does this role (or 
        roles) relate to the role of a university?
       
      
 
      3 Roles of TAFE
      Both State and Commonwealth Governments have made it clear that there 
        are two broad purposes which they expect TAFE to serve. These are firstly, 
        to contribute to economic growth through the development of vocational 
        skills. TAFE is seen as an appropriate vehicle to implement government 
        training and retraining policies because of its strong links with the 
        labour market. Secondly, TAFE is to contribute to social equity through 
        broadening access to educational and training opportunities to those sections 
        of the community deemed to be socially, economically or educationally 
        disadvantaged.
      In serving those purposes, TAFE needs to continue to take a leading role 
        in the following programs:
      
        1) Youth programs
         
        TAFE's prime role is to continue to offer a range of vocational programs 
          to those young people who have chosen to leave school and enrol in TAFE 
          courses.
        TAFE must continue to take a greater share of the responsibility for 
          conceiving overall strategies to improve the range of real educational 
          options post-Year 10. Several educational and labour market strategies 
          have been aimed at alleviating high youth unemployment. These options 
          now include full-time education, structured combinations of employment, 
          education and training, and opportunities for further education after 
          entering the labour market. As students become aware of a range of post-compulsory 
          education and training options provided through TAFE, and the mechanisms 
          for enhancing movement between the different providers of education 
          and training through recognition and credit transfer, more and more 
          school students may see TAFE as a viable option to tertiary education 
          at a university.
        In efforts to provide comprehensive pathways to work and tertiary education, 
          TAFE should continue to collaborate with the Schools sector in the design, 
          delivery and resourcing of joint Schools/TAFE courses.
         
        2) Trade training
         
        A high proportion of TAFE students are in TAFE because of their labour 
          market circumstances. Examples include apprentices who are required 
          to attend TAFE under the conditions of their indenture.
        Stronger links need to be developed between industry and TAFE colleges 
          so that local industry innovations, processes and best practices continue 
          to enrich, extend and improve courses taught by TAFE colleges. At the 
          same time these links are necessary in ensuring that TAFE colleges are 
          teaching techniques/processes which are appropriate to the level of 
          development of local industry. These may not always involve "state 
          of the art" machinery and processes.
        However, equally important is the proactive role that vocational education 
          and training must play in the assessment of emerging skills required 
          by the evolving needs of industry in increasing international competitiveness. 
          The above factors highlight the importance of college staff monitoring 
          developments at the industry level, keeping up-to-date with changing 
          technology and being able to assist industry, where necessary, with 
          expertise in the analysis of training needs. Furthermore, TAFE will 
          be in great demand from industry to devise on-the-job training courses 
          and to assist with assessment.
         
        3) Adult training and retraining programs
        i) Displaced workers seeking new vocational directions
         
        In addition to the development of programs which provide initial training 
          in various occupational areas, there is also a need to focus on the 
          needs of workers affected by changing work practices and new technology. 
          Retraining can involve updating of skills or complete retraining for 
          employees who are dislocated or retrenched.
         
        ii) Well qualified school leavers including university graduates 
          seeking marketable skills
         
        Many higher education graduates, particularly those with generalist 
          degrees, have difficulty in making the transition from education to 
          work. The movement of higher education students to TAFE courses is in 
          many ways a response to this difficulty. This does not necessarily mean 
          that university students are dissatisfied with higher education. These 
          students appear to be utilising the unique strengths of the two sectors 
          and using TAFE courses to change direction and/or acquire different, 
          specifically industry-related skills where emphasis is on access to 
          short, highly focused courses. For many students TAFE courses and university 
          study are distinct but meaningful components of their overall tertiary 
          education and training experience. A generic skill which is highly valued 
          is the desire to continue to learn. The frequency with which higher 
          education graduates access further formal courses of study may therefore 
          be interpreted as a highly positive outcome from higher education.
         
        4) Equity and access programs
         
        Although each of the post-secondary education sectors has an important 
          role to play in a comprehensive attack on educational disadvantage, 
          TAFE is seen as the sector which is most accessible in terms of entry 
          to education, and the most widespread in terms of the number of campuses 
          and their geographical spread. TAFE should continue to offer people 
          of different abilities, circumstances and needs a range of vocational 
          preparation programs via a range of modes and attendance patterns. TAFE 
          could take advantage of its wider geographical reach and function more 
          as a conduit and performance assessment system for entry into further 
          study. Additionally, the use of TAFE colleges to provide facilities 
          for the teaching of advanced education and university courses in locations 
          which arerelatively remote geographically would significantly enhance 
          social equity in relation to educational opportunities.
      
 
       
      
4 How do these roles relate to universities?
      Pressure to provide the expertise necessary to sustain a sophisticated 
        -technological economy inevitably leads to the need for mobility of students 
        between institutions and sectors in terms of upgrading qualifications. 
        Multiple entry and exit points must serve the vocational and personal 
        aspirations of students and the expectations of the wider community, including 
        industry. Though sectoral boundaries should remain salient, the broader 
        environment should become much more fluid, receptive and encouraging to 
        inter-sectora1 movement.
      It is necessary to ensure the balanced and co-ordinated development of 
        postsecondary education in Australia and to promote the diversifying of 
        opportunities. The activities of TAFE and the universities must therefore 
        be viewed and planned within a context of lifelong learning and of mechanisms 
        to encourage and facilitate recurrent education.
      Credit transfer or recognition is one means of encouraging students to 
        pursue higher level qualifications. In accordance with the view that tertiary 
        education should provide a continuum of education and training opportunities, 
        articulation allows liberal credit thereby facilitating student progress 
        from one level of education to the next. At the University of Adelaide, 
        emphasis is on the articulation of TAFE courses in single vocational fields 
        with courses in the same fields offered by the University. Examples of 
        the vocational fields in which articulation of courses occur are business, 
        agribusiness, engineering, information science, and applied science including 
        agriculture and horticulture.
      The University of Adelaide has recently seen some important developments 
        in bringing the various sectors of education closer together, with the 
        aim of improving the relevance and accessibility of educational offerings. 
        Some examples include:
      
        • a recently completed Agricultural and Horticultural Training Pathways 
          Project with the involvement of the Faculty of Agricultural and Natural 
          Resource Sciences of the University of Adelaide, DETAFE, and the Agricultural 
          and Horticultural Training Council. The main aim of the project was 
          to provide an outline of current and possible future pathways between 
          existing DETAFE awards and University of Adelaide awards for selected 
          Agricultural and Horticultural industry sectors.
        • a DEETYA funded project in 1996 developed articulation and integrated 
          pathways in rural and allied industries between Secondary Education, 
          Vocational education and Training and the University. This has involved 
          a total revision of the Diploma in Horse Husbandry and Management offered 
          in 1997. It is proving to be a very popular course strongly supported 
          by the equine industry. This is a joint effort by the University's Department 
          of Animal Science, Veterinary and Applied Science, Torrens Valley Institute 
          of TAFE and Cheltenham Horse Skills Centre.
        • the Urrbrae Education Complex is being developed and involves the 
          relocation of Gilles Plains Campus of TAFE including the Brookway Park 
          Horticultural Centre. These will link with Urrbrae Agricultural High 
          School to share facilities for horticultural and animal sciences and 
          associated joint courses at the diploma level.
        • Courses taught in the TAFE sector are usually at certificate or diploma 
          level. There is, therefore, some overlap since diploma as well as degree 
          level courses --in the same vocational field are being taught in the 
          higher education sectors. However, the scope for the development of 
          integrated programs is limited to areas where the type of overlap between 
          the curriculum of TAPE colleges and the University's courses is educationally 
          meaningful. The co-operative design of curricula is made possible for 
          courses in single vocational areas where there is a clear progression 
          from those courses at paraprofessional level in TAFE to those at professional 
          level in higher education.
      
Clearly, there are several benefits which result from the collaborative 
        activities described above:
      
        • collaborative planning of curricula between higher education, TAFE, 
          and industry allows a "total industry" approach to the delivery 
          of education and training, where one facility provides programs which 
          range from Certificate level training to postgraduate research for an 
          industry;
        • collaboration provides TAFE personnel with access to a research and 
          development environment which might not only improve the level of expertise 
          of TAFE college staff but enables the vocational education and training 
          sector to take advantage of the intellectual developments of the disciplines 
          for improved practice and curricula. Such a cross-sectoral response 
          facilitates access to highly specialised equipment by TAFE college staff 
          and students while also allowing colleges to focus on local industry 
          needs;
        • articulation and co-operation with the Vocational Education and Training 
          sector provide appropriate pathways to university education so that 
          it is possible for the University to concentrate efforts on the later 
          years of the undergraduate program, Honours, Graduate and Postgraduate 
          education.
      
The demands for new and extra content in vocationally-related undergraduate 
        courses are insistent and difficult to balance. The provision of some 
        types of practical skill acquisition in the vocational education and training 
        sector, therefore, relieves higher education from some of these pressures.
       
       
      
5 Conclusion
      The linkages now being created between TAFE and higher education will 
        help to break down the rigid structures that have developed over past 
        years. However, cross-sectoral developments such as these should not damage 
        the structure of tertiary education in Australia by altering the distinctive 
        characteristics of existing sectors. What we want to create in this country 
        is a diversified system with each institution contributing according to 
        its funded mission to the development of the whole system of employment, 
        education and training.
      
      
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