Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 57
      The UNIVERSITY of NEWCASTLE
      OFFICE OF THE VICE-CHANCELLOR
      5 November, 1997
      Appropriate Roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education
       
      Summary
      1. Institutes of TAFE and the Universities should collaborate 
        to provide educational programs. These range from the inculcation of fundamental 
        workplace skills, using appropriate technology, to postgraduate research 
        degrees likely to lead to technology innovation and theory development. 
        Such TAFE-University collaboration will advance Australia's understanding 
        of their common core of disciplinary expertise.
      2. Each sector should concentrate on their areas of greatest 
        comparative advantage. 'Me TAFE sector should concentrate on the diploma 
        and advanced diploma courses inculcating fundamental workplace skills. 
        The University sector should concentrate on undergraduate and postgraduate 
        degree programs entailing greater focus on generic principles, and methods 
        of analysis and synthesis, conducive to the advancement of knowledge and 
        the production of graduates with specialised knowledge at the forefront 
        of their disciplines. Both sectors should therefore engage in teaching 
        and training for the benefit of society, and will, to a greater or lesser 
        Went, pursue vocational and utilitarian elements within their programs.
      3. Collaboration between the sectors should be undertaken 
        to avoid uneconomic overlap in course programs, thereby eliminating the 
        need for credit transfer arrangements in relation to studies common to 
        the programs in each sector. Preservation of the current ownership by 
        one sector or the other of a particular facet of curricula should not 
        be driven by funding or other territorial motives.
      4. Collaboration in curricula design should be undertaken 
        to provide a transparent location of teaching and to this end, the inculcation 
        of basic skills should be located where possible in the TAFE sector and 
        the more lateral thinking, critique and enquiry elements of the discipline 
        pursued in the university sector.
      5- Both sectors should be encouraged to, foster and nurture 
        the application of new knowledge and approaches to tertiary education. 
        TAFE staff and students should be encouraged to exploit their likely comparative 
        advantage in having the contemporary industry skills required to further 
        develop this knowledge and skill and their application to business and 
        industry. University staff and students should be encouraged to undertake 
        more pure and applied research that may be independent of 
        the contemporary needs of industry. Industry patronage will be required 
        to support these activities in both sectors.
      6. Current operation of joint facilities at the Central 
        Coast Campus of The University of Newcastle, Hunter Institute of Technology 
        and the Central Coast Community College, provides a setting in which the 
        above principles might be implemented. It is strongly recommended that 
        the commonwealth government fund the establishment and the operation of 
        a cross-sectoral education incubator for a period of three (3) 
        years to explore, develop and nurture appropriate collaboration between 
        the TAFE and university sectors.
       
      Discussion
      Them is considerable scope for the development of an 
        integrated tertiary education framework in which the TAFE and university 
        sectors function as partners rather than competitors. Despite progress 
        in respect of TAFE/University articulation arrangements and various credit 
        transfer schemes, the underlying position of intensive competition remains 
        between the sectors. Credit transfer and articulation arrangements arc 
        being advanced by many universities quite slowly. On the TAFE side the 
        arrangements are being contoured more to effect a fast-tracking to a degree 
        mechanism, than to creating an environment in which students moving from 
        the TAFE sector to the university sector might be placed in a position 
        to obtain a more extensive degree than had they entered university directly 
        from school. The current split of functions between the two sectors is 
        uncoordinated, wasteful and engenders much mistrust between administrators, 
        staff and students- It does not function in the best interests of students; 
        it does not encourage TAFE and the Universities to exploit for their mutual 
        benefit those facets of education in which they have a relative comparative 
        advantage; and, as a consequence does not serve the nation as well as 
        it should.
      Some commentators appear to confuse the roles of the 
        TAFE and the university sectors. There is a tendency to present the relationship 
        in the form of a simplistic hierarchical model leading to the notion that 
        TAFE qualifications signal the acquisition of a low level knowledge of 
        material which is also the focus of university degree programs. This has 
        led to the pursuit of block credit transfer from TAFE diploma and 
        advanced diploma program into the relevant university degree studies. 
        This does an injustice to the nature of TAFE studies and the technology 
        and skills transfer they entail, and overlooks the dominating focus in 
        universities on critical thinking within the framework of a particular 
        discipline which is traditionally the focus in their degree programs.
      An economic and pedagogically desirable framework in which TAFE and the 
        universities prosecuted those facets of tertiary education in which they 
        held a comparative advantage respectively, would entail:
      
        - Elimination of overlap between their separate programs. 
 
        
- Processes of collaboration and consultation between discipline leaders 
          from each sector to identify areas of comparative advantage.
        
 
        
- Collaboration over the development of curricula, and
        
 
        
- An exercise of mutual respect by each sector for the work of the other
      
The rhetoric of co-operation should be replaced by actual 
        collaboration and cooperation between the sectors. This could be achieved 
        with little effort. More cross-use of academic staff, sharing of facilities 
        and equipment, and sharing of ideas regarding how the two sectors might 
        work together to enhance and advance those disciplines which they address 
        in common would result.
      A substantial proportion of the credit transfer and articulation 
        arrangements that are being negotiated is unnecessary. These arrangements 
        are currently pursued as a consequence of wasteful over-lap of curricula 
        content across the sectors. This has arisen primarily by virtue of the 
        relative paucity of collaboration on course development. Furthermore, 
        credit transfer and other articulation arrangements are pursued primarily 
        within a framework of fast-tracking from a TAFE diploma or advanced diploma 
        award to a university degree. Articulation from a university program to 
        a TAFE program is often perceived to be a downgrading progress. This is 
        an opportunity lost for a migrant from the TAFE sector to the university 
        to obtain a better degree by using the ex-TAFE credit transfer to free 
        up time to take additional subjects. It also is an opportunity lost for 
        a university student to progress to TAFE to acquire skills to be pursued 
        only in TAFE.
      Perceptions regarding the relative status of TAFE awards 
        and university awards is the main basis underlying current articulation 
        negotiations. Those perceptions focus more upon the placement of each 
        award in the educational hierarchy, than upon the important differences 
        between the particular skills and knowledge imparted in each. A strongly 
        focussed campaign is needed to redress the naive ranking of awards within 
        society without reflection on the different competencies of certificate 
        holders, diplomates and university graduates. Often these perceptions 
        are nurtured by employers preferring employees with educational achievements 
        inappropriate to the tasks in which the employee will be engaged.
      A majority of professional associations in whose respective 
        disciplines TAFE and the universities offer courses, bestow accreditation 
        and registration only on university graduates. It is their undeniable 
        prerogative to do so. It would appear helpful were the professional associations 
        to give greater encouragement to TAFE, and the universities to collaborate 
        more closely in respect of curricula design and to engage less in tactical 
        plays to preserve their respective territories. This would be facilitated 
        by a rethink by professional bodies about the sub-professional/professional 
        dichotomy.
      Acquiring basic skills is an essential part of professional 
        education. Were the inculcation of such skills in many of the professional 
        disciplines - for example accounting, architecture, engineering, information 
        technology, law, nursing - located exclusively in TAFE, a new approach 
        to professional education and accreditation would emerge. It appears feasible 
        and highly desirable to negotiate with the professional bodies to have 
        such a TAFE skills component recognised as a formal part of the accreditation 
        process. Arguably, the inculcation of basic skill components in those 
        disciplines might well be better inculcated in the TAFE environment, with 
        its focus on extensive teaching and strong vocational orientation.
      Most of the credit transfer which is sought and agreed 
        upon in professional programs entails exempting or giving standing in 
        the university programs for TAFE subjects Which address basic skills. 
        Such overlap would be easily avoided by having it placed in the TAFE sector 
        and freeing-up university degree time to pursue other matters currently 
        excluded primarily on the grounds of insufficient time, given the current 
        funding mechanism.
      Such an arrangement might best be effected where the 
        TAFE and university programs can be pursued on the same location. Such 
        contiguity creates the environment in which the level of co-operation 
        and collaboration needed is easily achieved. To this end the framework 
        and fabric of the joint operation by Hunter Institute of Technology, The 
        University of Newcastle and the Central Coast Community College of the 
        Central Coast Campus at Ourimbah provides a most suitable site to function 
        as an incubator for the development of such a pattern of TAFE/university 
        collaboration- It is strongly recommended that the Commonwealth Government 
        fund such an incubator on the Central Coast Campus for an initial period 
        of three (3) years, thereby capturing a normal duration of study for both 
        the Hunter Institute of Technology's diploma and The University of Newcastle's 
        undergraduate degree awards.
      In conclusion, competitive attitudes within the TAFE 
        and University sectors militate against the successful development of 
        educationally effective and economic programs, particularly so in respect 
        to the programs leading to professional accreditation. Each sector has 
        a valuable contribution to make to such programs. Contrary to 'Hilmer-related' 
        sentiments, the elements of competition between the -sectors is wasteful 
        of both physical and human resources, does not provide a transparent and 
        serviceable pathway by which students may move between sectors, and encourages 
        a concept of credit transfer between the sectors rather than a seamless 
        approach to tertiary education.
      
      
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