Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 67.1
      CURTIN University of Technology Western Australia
      PMB 22
        Kalgoorlie 6430
        Western Australia
      Fax (08) 9088 6100
      Telephone (08) 9088 6000
      17th February 1998
      Re: Additional submission by witness on 18th February 98 at WAAPA Overlap 
        between Sectors
      We've found that our customers - students are called customers in the 
        VET Sector- customers who have completed a specialist degree in one discipline 
        after a few years at work frequently turn to TAFE for a management or 
        business related qualification like say, the Certificate in Supervision 
        as a kind of post graduate qualification. These customers are typically 
        in their early thirties. They don't care much whether they complete their 
        TAFE qualification as long as they acquire the skills they want. This 
        pattern is also common where a generalist degree like a BA or a BSc doesn't 
        provide an employment advantage in the labour market and the customer 
        seeks a set of specific skills in a TAFE award. In these situations, there 
        is little overlap between the degree and the TAFE award.
      A customer who is unable to complete a degree, can often obtain significant 
        numbers of exemptions and may be able to complete a TAFE award and so 
        be able to salvage something.
      Many of our TAFE customers who had abandoned their higher education ambitions 
        because of a too low TER score but who were successful at TAFE, can now 
        gain entry to higher education study. For them, TAFE becomes an alternative 
        pathway to higher education. They may be pleased with gaining their Diploma 
        but because of their unfulfilled ambition, continue with studies towards 
        a Degree. We also find in this category, customers who ceased their studies 
        before Year 12, have gained a -TAFE award and now would like to continue 
        with higher education. These customers are usually in their early twenties 
        and are more interested in the qualification as a symbol of status than 
        the skills learnt.
      In our experience, students who qualify for entry to higher education 
        studies, generally, do not initially enrol in TAFE. We see much value 
        in making the articulation arrangements between TAFE and Higher Education 
        more transparent, more predictable and less arbitrary in terms of exemptions 
        / cross credits.
      Cross Enrolment
      There is a good deal of cross enrolment between the sectors. Customers 
        do move back and forth, they do bits and pieces of qualifications feeding 
        and grazing on what appeals to them at a particular time in a fragmented 
        spontaneous manner. in daysgone by, the conventional notion was that students 
        would aim to reach the highest possible level in one particular field 
        of study, and that the highest qualification subsumes all others. The 
        conventional wisdom in articulation was seen as the need to broaden upward 
        mobility paths to Higher Education, especially for young people. But that 
        is not how in practice people choose to behave.
      Although the upward mobility paths are well defined in many areas and 
        Curtin Business School's articulation path is a model to emulate, these 
        vertical pathways are little used and have a largely symbolic value, as 
        much as to say: The pathway is open, please enter.
      By contrast to vertical pathways, the horizontal movement between the 
        Sectors is extensive. Movement from Higher Education to TAFE is more common 
        than movement the other way. Much of the movement is between courses that 
        are unrelated, though combining them can make good sense. Thus customers 
        often move from humanities in Higher Education to business or computing 
        courses in TAFE. Our customers are more interested in the skills than 
        the qualification.
      The older the customers, the less interest they have and the less motivated 
        they seem to be in acquiring testamurs. They are not concerned about not 
        completing TAFE awards. Older customers use their access to education 
        and training to find new careers or simply to assist them in changing 
        the direction of their lives. TAFE awards in themselves are not valued 
        very highly.
      It is not true in TAFE that a customer who has say, a Diploma in Hospitality 
        Management could be thought to be as competent in cookery as one with 
        a lower qualification of Certificate 2 in Cookery (Commercial) and automatically 
        get the "lower" award. Nor can it be assumed that the knowledge and skills 
        gained in a TAFE course are necessarily subsumed in a well constructed 
        Higher Education course up the line or that having a Higher Education 
        qualification will give exemptions in a TAFE course in the same area.
      The current situation where there is a drop of demand for entry to Higher 
        Education -may provide a window of opportunity to design a more soundly 
        based system of articulation between TAFE and Higher Education. There 
        is now a stronger need to facilitate non-school leaver entry. In TAFE 
        there is a desire to negotiate articulation -of courses into Higher Education 
        and Curtin as a multi-sectoral institution in WA is in an excellent position 
        to lead the way.
      Michal Kowalik 
      
      
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