Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
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Submission 41
       
      
Submission to the Inquiry into the Appropriate Roles of Institutes of 
        Technical and Further Education conducted by the House of Representatives 
        Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training
      22 October 1997
       
      
 
       
      
1 General
      The University of Western Australia is currently examining the possibility 
        of collaborations with different colleges of technical and further education 
        in Western Australia, so the roles of TAFE and the University have been 
        under our consideration in recent months. In Western Australia the possible 
        arrangements are made more intricate by the independence of the TAFE colleges 
        from each other, but this should not prevent generalisations being made 
        about the role of the colleges in broad terms.
      It is a truism to say that the last decade has been one of far-reaching 
        and often hectic change in post-secondary education in Australia, fuelled 
        by developments in government policy and technological innovation. The 
        resulting mergers of institutions have meant some universities joining 
        institutions which have links with technical and further education. On 
        the other hand, policy changes may be seen to have increased the differences 
        between TAFE colleges and universities; this would certainly be the situation 
        in Western Australia.
       
      
2 The Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education
      In Western Australia TAFE colleges come under the strategic management 
        of the Department of Training, and comprise slightly less than half of 
        the vocational education and training sector. It is our understanding 
        that the Department of Training follows policies which ensure that TAFE 
        colleges have a different role from universities. TAFE serves the labour 
        market in a fairly direct way. Courses are designed to impart limited 
        but clearly defined practical skills. Most are of short duration and students 
        are assessed against a predetermined list of competencies to be obtained; 
        students achieve the competency or don't, without gradings that compare 
        one student with another or restrictions on the number ot times they can 
        attempt the course. Only a small percentage of students are enrolled in 
        long term diploma programmes. The provision of courses is very much labour 
        market-driven. Despite the independent management of each college, assessment 
        is meant to be nationally consistent, enabling students to move between 
        colleges with relative ease.
      By contrast, universities, on the whole, provide courses of a much more 
        generalist, historical and theoretical nature, demanding greater conceptual 
        ability and less concern with particular competencies. The latter are 
        not completely absent of course, since levels of literacy, computer or 
        laboratory skills, for example, may be prerequisites to completion of 
        a unit of study; however, these will only ever comprise a small element 
        of the requirements. Increasingly, attention is given to enabling students 
        to understand processes and to acquire life-long learning abilities in 
        areas such as critical analysis, reasoning, imagination and scientific 
        method. Courses are provided taking some note of market demand but their 
        content and structure reflect the views of recognised specialists having 
        regard to the area of knowledge for its own sake. The link between teaching 
        and research, with each influencing the other, is seen as fundamental. 
        The great majority of students pursue long term degree programmes and 
        are graded on scales that enable comparison of one student with another. 
        Time limits are imposed for the completion of degree programmes, and the 
        programmes may vary substantially from university to university. A university 
        such as ours also has a substantial number of students undertaking supervised 
        postgraduate research, an activity absent from TAFE colleges, which are 
        teaching institutions while universities are institutions of teaching 
        and research. Research efficiency, particularly in areas such as medicine 
        and science which require specialised equipment, is best achieved through 
        a degree of concentration. It could be argued that the nation's research 
        effort is already too widely dispersed.
      The University believes that the roles currently undertaken by universities 
        and TAFE colleges respectively are appopriate to current circumstances, 
        and that neither type of institution has the expertise to largely take 
        over the functions of the other.
       
      
3 The Extent to which the Roles of TAFE Should Overlap with those 
        of Universities
      The National Training Authority in its submission to the Review of Higher 
        Education Financing and Policy points to substantial growth in both university 
        enrolments (following the Dawkins changes) and participation in vocational 
        education and training, plus shifts of students between the two types 
        of institution, particularly from universities to VET. Much could be said 
        in favour of the education philosophies behind the teaching and learning 
        undertaken in both universities and TAFE colleges, but a philosophical 
        argument is likely to be of limited assistance in this review. Given that 
        Australian universities have a strong reputation internationally (comparisons 
        for TAFE colleges are more difficult to obtain), enrolments and performance 
        indicators such as the quality audits undertaken for universities suggest 
        that each type of institution is satisfying a demand and performing a 
        useful function in both training and more broadly educating the nation 
        (not to mention earning substantial export income). Each type of institution 
        is helping Australia towards maintaining and improving its position as 
        a nation with the intellectual capacity widely seen to be essential to 
        economic and social success in the twenty-first century. Given the pace 
        of economic, technological and social change in the contemporary world, 
        this University believes that there is a great need for diversity, both 
        within the university system and within post-secondary education more 
        broadly. Competition between TAFE colleges and universities will diminish 
        the range of educational opportunities for Australians.
       
      
4 Collaborations between Universities and TAFE Colleges
      An acceptance of different roles will allow the possibility of collaboration 
        between the two different types of institution, each drawing on its expertise 
        to provide students with a mix of abilities and levels of knowledge. The 
        University of Western Australia recognises the value of TAFE's mission 
        in offering vocational training with a strong industry orientation and 
        its capacity to offer short term courses, often at short notice. Such 
        training ultimately derives from the more pure, knowledge-based and research-linked 
        teaching of universities, and represents a practical application of such 
        knowledge. Difference in orientation will provide services for the more 
        theoretically minded (at university), the more practically minded (at 
        TAFE), and those who want something of both. This University is currently 
        investigating collaborations with TAFE colleges, including means by which 
        students might be able to enrol at the University on the basis of their 
        results in TAFE courses or enrol at TAFE in a more streamlined fashion 
        after completing degree studies, particularly in the more generalist degrees 
        of Arts and Science.
      The University is also seeking collaborations which allow the sharing 
        of expensive resources. An example of this is the Advanced Manufacturing 
        Technologies Centre laboratory, co-ordinated by a consortium of The University 
        of Western Australia, Curtin University and TAFE at Wembley, and used 
        by TAFE students and students in our Bachelor of Engineering (Material 
        Engineering) programme. This facility also allows for research activity, 
        with research expertise provided by the universities and technical assistance 
        provided by TAFE.
      Generally speaking, the University wishes to avoid confusing its own 
        role by attempting to teach TAFE courses on campus. There are, however, 
        some areas of convergence in which the University may be able to teach 
        limited VET courses, either because of special expertise or because such 
        courses are not offered by TAFE colleges. Examples might come in areas 
        such as Music, Mathematics, Computer Science or Agriculture. Further, 
        universities may be able to collaborate with TAFE to teach different aspects 
        of joint courses; one such is currently planned for this University, Curtin 
        University and TAFE in the area of oral health.
      It is crucial to realise that such collaborations are enabled by differences 
        in philosophy and practice between the two types of educational institution. 
        We believe that such collaborations are to be fostered, and would welcome 
        any steps taken by the Standing Committee on Employment, Education and 
        Training to overcome obstacles to collaboration. Amongst these we would 
        identify the absence of graded assessment practices in TAFE colleges and 
        the different funding arrangements, whereby TAFE fees are kept very low 
        through government (largely state government) subsidy, and no HECS system 
        applies. We would also note that successful collaboration between universities 
        and TAFE colleges frequently requires use of the internet, electronic 
        mail and video conferencing -- in other words, adequate technological 
        facilities, for which either type of institution needs reasonable funding. 
        Collaboration may provide a way to break down barriers between the city 
        and the bush, as well as between universities and TAFE colleges.
      
        
      
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