Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 48
      Institutes of Technical and Further Education
      Submission on Appropriate Roles
      Michael White.
       
      The main focus of this submission concerns the extent to which roles 
        of the TAFE institutes should overlap with those of the universities, 
        an issue which has become increasingly important for four reasons;
      1. The cross-crediting arrangements that are now common between TAFE 
        institutions and universities;
      2. Country connecting arrangements between regional TAFE institutions 
        and universities;
      3. Cross-sectoral institutional amalgamations that have been promoted 
        since the Dawkins Report of 1987; and
      4. Some pressures, also emanating from the Dawkins Report, to permit 
        a number of TAFE institutions (called Institutes of TAFE) to award degrees-
      This submission deals with each of the above situations seriatim
       
      1. Cross Crediting.
      During the 1980s and 1990s official inquiries and reports 
        frequently criticised universities for a slow response to government initiatives 
        with respect to credit and advanced standing accorded TAFE studies. I 
        believe this criticism was often overstated, especially with respect to 
        the former institutes of technology and colleges of advanced education, 
        though perhaps more justified where the older universities were concerned. 
        Curtin University (formerly the W.A. Institute of Technology), for example, 
        has a long record of sympathetic treatment of credit for TAFE studies, 
        especially in management/business/accounfing, art/design/architecture, 
        library studies, social work, and engineering-
      Government initiative favoured a nation-wide approach 
        to this process, which in my opinion was always going to strike trouble. 
        TAFE studies and qualifications even within one state could vary in standard 
        substantially, and it was invariably necessary to examine each case on 
        an individual basis. 'Me comparability was never a simple process, and 
        simplistic solutions based on hours of class contact and duration of study, 
        even of actual qualification (diploma, associate diploma, certificate) 
        were never realistic. They ignored quite major variations in academic 
        levels, theoretical orientation, staff quality and qualifications, entry 
        levels and standards of assessment. Where satisfactory arrangements have 
        been worked out, for example in the cases mentioned above, they have been 
        done with fall knowledge of local circumstances and institutional policies 
        and practices.
      Bardsley's studies in the 1980s indicated the arrangements 
        worked satisfactorily for the numbers involved, but criticised a few academic 
        area (engineering in particular) for their reluctance to concede credit 
        and also suggested that cross crediting would become more important in 
        time as student enrolments in the TAFE sector increased.
      TAFE enrolments, particularly Of full time students, 
        have indeed risen since about 1996, with
      fewer secondary pupils competing for the standard matriculation-style 
        examinations and prefacing to compete for entry into TAFE courses of one 
        kind or other that on the fare of it
      appeared more likely to have favourable employment outcomes.
      Given these trends, there is every likelihood that demand for transfer 
        from TAFE to university degree courses will increase. The current arrangements, 
        in the circumstances, are capable of .. dealing adequately with the situation.
      Objections to this conclusion might be framed in the 
        light of national vocational standards and qualifications under the Commonwealth-states 
        agreements that started with the work of the National Training Board and 
        now falls under the ANTA umbrella This objection is rejected for two reasons. 
        One is that the universities are not convinced that the competency-based 
        standards, assessment and curriculum arrangements in TAFE and training 
        are acceptable where comparability with university studies are concerned. 
        The other is that universities remain to be convinced that the elaborate 
        and bureaucratic procedures for accreditation of awards and staff involved 
        are actually reflected much at the institutional or workplace levels.
       
      2. Country contracting-. TAFE and higher education.
      The W.A.Institute of Technology (now Curtin University) 
        was one of the first Australian higher education institutions to cooperate 
        with the federal government in the introduction of contacted arrangements 
        with regional TAFE colleges to enable parts of degree courses to be delivered 
        (taught) at locations close to the students concerned- These have worked 
        flexibly, simply and successfully at Curtin in the fields of business/accounting/management, 
        nurse education and teacher education. If and where the demand is present, 
        procedures for extending the provisions are simple and quick to be applied.
      In terms of future demand, we strongly hold the view 
        that dais arrangement is preferred to either establishment of new higher 
        education institutions in regional centres or the upgrading of TAFE Institutions 
        concerned to degree granting institutions in their own right Regional 
        CAES, now Universities have always had a tenuous existence,- lack academic 
        credibility and are very expensive to conduct Even branches of universities 
        in regional centres are inefficient responses to regional demands for 
        access to higher education.
      Good examples in Western Australia are the School of 
        Mines-Kalgoorlie College merger (now a branch college of Curtin), where 
        the costs of conducting mining and engineering courses have been out of 
        all proportion to the benefits- Edith Cowan University confronts similar 
        difficulties with respect to its Bunbury campus.
      The main problem has been that the federal and or state Governments have 
        never been prepared to accept financial responsibility for decisions to 
        create such institutions, most of which have been political in nature 
        rather than based on realistic educational grounds. It always made more 
        sense to establish such institutions along the lines of regional community 
        (TAFE) colleges that had a broad educational, training and community service 
        charter which could include contracted arrangements with one or other 
        of the higher education institutions in the state. In Kalgoorlie the rnerging, 
        of the School of Mines with the Community College would have been sufficient, 
        provided the higher level mining and engineering programs (staff and equipment) 
        had been transferred to the Bentley campus of WAIT. Instead, political 
        lobbying ensured that the combined institution ended up as a branch of 
        Curtin which is expensive to run without special supplementation from 
        the governments which forced the decision, inefficient where the allocation 
        of expensive resources to very few advanced level students is concerned, 
        and split important applied science departments (metallurgy, surveying, 
        engineering) into small and inefficient units where one significant department 
        at Bentley would have produced research and teaching units of national 
        quality. It is interesting to record that at the time the Chamber of Mines 
        in Western Australia opposed a move to bring the tertiary work of the 
        School of Mines to the Bentley campus of WAIT, it was itself relocating 
        to Perth (and not far from WAIT itself) because of all the same reasons 
        that WAIT was arguing for concentration of resources at Bentley. The forced 
        political decision to keep the higher level work going at Kalgoorlie was 
        an exercise of almost breathtaking hypocrisy. And the costs have come 
        out of the teaching budgets of departments located at Bentley.
      The contracting arrangements arc particularly suited 
        to the Australian. environment where regional centres tend to have small 
        populations narrow industry bases and limited demand for higher education. 
        The TAFE level programs satisfy the training and vocational education 
        demands, and the contracting arrangements provide adequate responses to 
        particular demands that come and go with the trend of demand in such centres.
       
      3. Cross-Sectoral Institutional Amalgamations
      This submission does not favour such solutions, except 
        where they hall proved almost necessary to rectify legacies of poor planning 
        in earlier times. Victoria, and in particular Melbourne, provides classic 
        examples at the CAE level where at one time it was possible to enrol for 
        engineering degree courses in about eight institutions. Teacher education 
        was available on nearly every save comer. In the post Dawkins period, 
        it seemed that only by forcing draconian solutions was there going to 
        be any rationalisation achieved, (RMIT, of course, was always a special 
        case that was justified by its history and educational record.)
      In other states, there are similar examples of inadequate 
        planning in the former advanced education sectors and especially where 
        teacher education is concerned. in Virtually all of them there have been 
        forced amalgamations of former teachers' colleges to-form CAEs and then 
        these, sometimes broadened by the addition of social welfare and business 
        programs, were upgraded to university status after 1988. 'Me former institutes 
        of technology were all viable institutions with comprehensive academic-professional 
        programs and large enrolments dud made relatively painless their transition 
        to university status-
      To compound these earlier efforts by forcing mergers 
        between TAFE institutes or senior colleges and former CAEs would not be 
        sensible from a public policy viewpoint 'Me TAFE colleges have an important 
        role to perform in the training and lower level vocational education fields, 
        and one Bud has yet to realise its potential.. Much needs to be achieved 
        in this sector before many of the institutions can claim any special eminence 
        in their local, regional and state communities, It would be highly desirable, 
        however, to encourage transfer arrangements for students wanting to move 
        from TAFE into higher education through existing channels that are tested 
        and now working fairly well.
       
      4. Degree awards in TAFE Institutes.
      From the preceding paragraph, it is obvious that this submission does 
        not recommend this course of action. It took nearly twenty years for the 
        former institutes of technology to gain sufficient standing in local industry 
        and professional circles that their degree awards w= widely accepted in 
        Australia and overseas. For the most part, these institutions now command 
        this level of respect, and they all provide substantial research and development 
        opportunities that also bear comparison with standard programs among the 
        older universities. They all commenced operation, moreover, from a base 
        of tertiary level technical and professional courses they had been separated 
        in the 1950s and 1960s from the ruck of TAFE colleges and schools.
      Existing TAFE institutions are not even as well prepared as these former 
        institutes were in the 1960s for transformation into degree granting institutions. 
        it might even be argued that since .the introduction of competency based 
        approaches to their higher level courses the TAFE institutions are even 
        further removed from the academic environment in winch degree programs 
        are typically conducted.
      The solution to demand from TAFE graduates for degree 
        awards is for them to transfer into well established degree programs in 
        institutions that have the history, experience and resources to mount 
        them with credibility. The transfer process, of course, could be improved 
        where this is found desirable. If on the other hand, a political decision 
        is to dictate the addition of degree awards to those at certificate and 
        diploma levels in a TAFE college, the long-standing practice in this country 
        and overseas is for the ward to be granted under the umbrella of a well 
        established and respected degree granting institution, usually of course 
        a major university.
       
      Concluding observations.
      The intent of this submission has been to strengthen 
        the bases of existing and proven arrangements for transfer between the 
        TAFE and university sectors, rather than to sanction the emergence, at 
        considerable expense to the public purse, of yet another level of degree-granting 
        institutions in the TAFE sector. There is a question here of maintaining 
        the credibility of Australian degrees in the international academic community, 
        as well as in the context of international comparisons (for example made 
        by fee-paying overseas students considering enrolment in Australian higher 
        education). An "open, competitive market" in this field is something 
        of a misnomer, since even within the university sector there is a peck 
        order among institutions that is well understood in the Australian and 
        international communities. In present circumstances in Australia (falling 
        value of Asian currencies, perceptions of racism in Australia and doubts 
        about the continuing viability of many Australian university programs) 
        it would be folly to introduce yet another rung in the degree status hierarchy, 
        and one that will struggle to attain any credibility at all in the foreseeable 
        future. It might be argued, moreover, though this goes weft beyond the 
        scope of this submission, that unless the gradual slide in Australian 
        university standards and finances is halted, the existing university institutions 
        are going to find it harder to retain their existing levels of credibility.
      
      
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