Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 65
      DRYSDALE INSTITUTE OF TAFE
      11 November 1997
      INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF
      TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
      The appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further education
      The traditional roles of TAFE institutes is under great 
        change throughout Australia due to the implementation of national reforms 
        in vocational education and training. The open competitive training market 
        which is now emerging through the policy of User Choice, means that TAFE 
        institutes will no longer have a monopoly on vocational training. These 
        changes may be viewed by some sectors of TAFE as a threat to the 
        quality of the training system, however, change is upon us and it is important 
        that people within TAFE recognise the changes taking place and make the 
        most of the opportunities which these changes present.
      Regardless of the training reforms and the consequent 
        changes to the development of training curricula, the economics of industry 
        prevalent in Australia today dictates that much of the training required 
        by industry will depend upon the individual economic situations of employers. 
        As a high percentage of Australian companies are of the small to medium 
        size, their training needs will be dictated by their ability to employ 
        labour at a cost that will maintain their individual competitiveness. 
        This is becoming particularly evident in the comparisons of employment 
        in regard to apprentices and trainees. In recent times there has been 
        a decrease across Australia in the numbers of apprentices being employed, 
        which has been off-set by a similar increase in the number of trainees 
        being employed under the traineeship system. This appears to indicate 
        that employers are seeking less expensive employment options without a 
        long term commitment.
      If vocational education and training is to become more 
        responsive to the requirements of the labour market, it is important that 
        we review our current systems and at the same time establish a future 
        role for institutes of technical and further education within the training 
        system. Perhaps consideration could be given to the public funded systems 
        in providing initial entry level training for the majority of people entering 
        into the workforce, before employers are expected to assume responsibility 
        for the further training of their employees, in cooperation with both 
        public and privately funded providers. An example of this training format 
        already exists in Tasmania in the meat industry, which has been extremely 
        well accepted by all stakeholders. A further proposal is currently before 
        the State Training Authority in regard to other areas of contracted training 
        which are serviced by the Drysdale Institute of TAFE in Tasmania as a 
        statewide institute responsible for food, hospitality and tourism training. 
        The philosophy behind this approach is to change the existing system of 
        contracted apprenticeship training to provide employers with an independently 
        selected workforce which is pre-trained prior to entering the apprenticeship 
        system to provide better cost effectiveness, quality training and higher 
        retention rates than is currently the situation. It is a case of using 
        the existing public funds for apprenticeship training in a more effective 
        manner.
      In order to maintain and improve the quality of the training, 
        which is currently being provided to give both younger people and more 
        mature participants a broad skill base, it is important that training 
        does not become narrowly focused to meet the needs of individual employers' 
        operations. There is a threat that if this were to be the case, that many 
        people will only be trained for specific tasks which relate to the employer's 
        product output. The economics of running a business in today's climate, 
        also encourages employers to only train people to a level of skills commensurate 
        with a minimum wage level which remunerates that skill.
      In opening the competitive training market to both private 
        and public providers including secondary schools and SkillShare trainers, 
        there is the distinct possibility that TAFE institutes could inherit the 
        training which is too expensive, too long, too capital and labour intensive.
      It is envisaged in the future that the roles of TAFE 
        institutes will be influenced by collaborative partnerships developing 
        between TAFE, industry and other providers of training. During the next 
        few years it is likely that as the training market evolves, that a variety 
        of innovative arrangements will emerge. TAFE administrators will need 
        to assess the changing training needs and become pro-active in initiating 
        these collaborative partnerships, in order that the institutes will be 
        able to survive and flourish in the new training markets. It is also a 
        time when both the Commonwealth and state governments need to monitor 
        the changing training arrangements and encourage these partnerships, rather 
        than force unacceptable changes upon the various public and private providers 
        of training.
      Within the changing roles of the various training providers, 
        the government needs to review the role of secondary schools, SkillShare 
        and other government funded providers of training, in order that a competitive 
        market does not emerge at the expense of training quality, and create 
        confusion in the minds of both the participants within the training programs 
        and employers who are expected to employ labour from these training programs.
      The extent to which those roles should overlap with universities
      The emergence of the new training market has already convinced the more 
        forward thinking universities in Australia that the time has come for 
        them to explore collaborative links with the TAFE system, in order to 
        build on the expertise of TAFE graduates and the success which they currently 
        enjoy in the world of commercial employment. There are already examples 
        of graduates of advanced diploma courses at level 6 of the Australian 
        Qualifications Framework obtaining formal articulation to university degree 
        courses, in order to complete their skills training at a higher tertiary 
        level. Whilst TAFE institutes will be able to provide training from levels 
        1 - 6 of the Australian Qualifications Framework, it should be understood 
        that many secondary schools throughout Australia are now able to provide 
        training up to level 2 of the AQF and that universities are able to provide 
        programs for people in diploma and advanced diploma at levels 5 and 6. 
        The only levels of the AQF which are still the absolute responsibility 
        of TAFE are levels 3 and 4.
      However, it is more likely that most of the levels 5 
        and 6 programs will be delivered by TAFE. Articulation arrangements between 
        TAFE advanced diploma level 6 and universities is supported with universities 
        providing direct transfer for TAFE student graduates from the diploma 
        programs. As TAFE institutes are now required to give automatic credit 
        transfer to secondary school graduates entering into TAFE programs, it 
        should also mean that TAFE graduates have formal articulation transfer 
        to university degrees to support the policy of a seamless system of education 
        from school to university.
      
      
Back to top