Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 73
      TAFE SA Institute Council
       GPO Box 1872
       Adelaide SA 5001
       Ph (08) 8207 8249
       Fax (08) 8207 8249
      Submission by the Council of the Adelaide Institute of TAFE
      to the Select Committee on the Role of TAFE Institutes
      ROLE OF TAFE INSTITUTES
      This paper is written in response to a request from the 
        House of Representatives Standing Committee on Education. It introduces 
        general issues concerning the role of TAFE Institutes. The intention is 
        to provoke discussion and stimulate interest in the issues so that the 
        Standing Committee issues an invitation to meet with the enquiry team.
      TAFE Institutes - A National Asset
      Australia has a unique asset in its TAFE Institutes which should be preserved;
      It is through the TAFE Institutes that Vocational Training became 
        an identifiable education sector and Vocational Training became 
        regarded as important;
      The Institutes comprise a valuable infrastructure which has been developed 
        over a long period of time through Government and community investment;
      TAFE Institutes are the public providers of vocational education within 
        the Vocational Education and Training (VET) system.
      The role of the public providers has not been spelt out 
        in national policy development since the inception of the ANTA arrangements. 
        Far too often it appears that national policy is predicated on the assumption 
        that a training market can only be contrived by restraining or damaging 
        the public provider, in the belief that it will always be the largest 
        element of the sector and always be available in the event of market failure.
      TAFE is a huge national asset and TAFE Institutes have 
        extremely good records at getting students into employment. They are also 
        very highly rated in terms of student satisfaction and in recent years 
        have become well regarded as a provider of post secondary education. Current 
        policies place these achievements at risk.
      Lack of Research
      Noted VET commentator Des Fooks has pointed out how major 
        developments affecting TAFE Institutes and the VET sector generally have 
        been introduced without a research base and without sufficient prior analysis, 
        including analysis of costs. A prime example is the New Apprenticeship 
        Scheme and associated User Choice arrangements, where at one point 20 
        separate consultancies were operating concurrently to fill the enormous 
        gap between policy determination and actual implementation.
      Research into vocational education tends to be narrow and looks at details 
        after policy has been implemented. There has been no research into 
        the importance of the public provider.
      In line with the theory that government departments will 
        become more efficient, policies have been developed in an attempt to force 
        the public provider of VET to compete for public funds alongside the private 
        provider. This was based on ideology, not research.
      The case for the competitive training market has still 
        to be made. A likely outcome of research and experience is that the 
        sector should provide a mix of market based and public service provision, 
        as with Universities. No research has been conducted on how such a system 
        would work or on the pivotal role TAFE Institutes might play.
      One major area of research deficiency is the need to examine TAFE Institutes 
        governance in a competitive market environment.
      The Training Provider of last resort
      The purchaser provider model can drive TAFE Institutes into becoming 
        the training provider of last resort.
      If all else falls - if the private provider goes out of business; if 
        students are disadvantaged in some way; if they have specific learning 
        difficulties - will TAFE Institutes have to pick up the pieces?
       Will the Government be left with the expensive pieces?
      "Equity" said a national representative of private providers 
        at the NCVER Conference in Adelaide this year, "is not an issue for 
        the private provider".
      Once a fully market based system is implemented and if no public service 
        role is articulated and funded by Government for TAFE Institutes, autonomous 
        TAFE Institutes cannot be relied on to pick up the 
        pieces left behind by market failure.
      Some areas of training will simply not be provided. Government will either 
        have to re-invent a TAFE system for these areas or rely on immigration 
        to provide the missing skills.
      Deregulation of the training market
      Deregulation of the training market is meant to increase 
        the opportunities for choice by clients, enhance flexibility, and meet 
        the needs of industry, communities and economic development priorities. 
        Statistics indicate that enrolment in VET has remained static, that apprenticeships 
        and traineeships have not increased significantly while numbers at Universities 
        have continued to grow.
      Australia has developed an extremely unbalanced tertiary education 
        system where most enrolments at VET level are for short programs and 
        career training courses in VET attract far fewer students than university 
        courses.
      This does not correspond to labour market realities. It suggests that 
        the reforms in the training sector are not producing the expected results 
        by providing the numbers of skilled individuals required by the workforce.
      Links with enterprises
      In order to provide a skilled and productive work force, 
        TAFE Institutes provide uniquely flexible and diverse training opportunities 
        for business, industry and individuals developed in cooperation with enterprises. 
        TAFE Institutes, through their Councils, have 
        a direct link into industrial and commercial enterprises. 
        At Governmental level, Industry Training Advisory Boards provide 
        a formal linkage with organisations that represent industry. Both of these 
        provide pathways which are valuable in translating the training needs 
        of industry and commerce into relevant training programs.
      Increasingly, Institutes are providing training in-house, 
        directly to the employees, or by way of on-line delivery. TAFE Institutes, 
        through their Councils, advisory structures and day to day integration 
        with the work of enterprises represent a far closer link with industry 
        than the supposedly 'industry led' arrangements at national level, which 
        rely on the interplay of the Federal training bureaucracy with national 
        employer associations and Union bodies - several layers removed from the 
        shopfloor.
      Improving productivity
      On a comparative basis, TAFE Institutes produce curriculum 
        hours at a much lower cost than either senior secondary schools or Universities
      The debate within the Institutes has been about balancing 
        demands for increased quality of training and expanded training opportunities 
        but for a lower cost. Institutes have sought to increase productivity 
        by adopting more flexible means of delivefing programs and these include 
        the use of modern technology to deliver courses available on-line, via 
        video-conference and via audio-conference technology as three examples.
      Creative environments
      As well as providing students who have skills required 
        by particular enterprises, TAFE Institutes are concerned to educate 
        students to have a set of broad generic competencies which 
        will enable them to adjust to a changing world of work. 
        As employment demands change, students will have the ability to 
        continue in the development of new skills in order to remain relevant 
        - Life-Long Learning.
      Student satisfaction in TAFE Institutes is markedly higher 
        than that in Universities. Statistics indicate that the number of students 
        moving from University into TAFE is higher than the number moving in the 
        opposite direction. In 1997, approximately 3000 university graduates were 
        enrolled in TAFE Institutes.
      A fully market based system will not provide student 
        learning support services or student amenities. It will also not allow 
        Institutes to teach general educational competencies which will provide 
        the student with whole-of-life flexible skills rather than merely immediately 
        employable skills.
      TAFE Institutes currently provide a rich learning environment. 
        As a result of investment by the Governments and the community over many 
        years, their students have access to excellent Learning Resource Centres, 
        complex Information Technology resources and experienced student support 
        centres and in many Institutes, facilities for student recreation.
      Creative professional development
      VET requires creative staff to produce a creative teaching environment. 
        Realistically, the major educational developments in vocational education 
        must be expected to occur in TAFE Institutes. Developments such 
        as in curriculum, flexible delivery and teaching resources occur in an 
        educational environment with thinking professionals.
      Australian TAFE Institutes are recognised internationally for their contributions 
        to vocational education and training.
      Links with Higher Education
      Linkages with Universities are important. Arrangements 
        should be in place to enable students to articulate and carry credit into 
        courses offered by Universities. This should be part of a national framework 
        and not have to be negotiated, sometimes painfully, on an institution 
        to institution basis.
      It has been suggested that TAFE Institutes should merge 
        with Universities. This requires research to see if the benefits outweigh 
        the costs. Some Universities are hidebound within long established structures 
        and a culture which does not predispose them to flexible delivery options. 
        There is also a perception of superiority amongst some Universities 
        that TAFE courses are of a lower status. In this environment, the 
        TAFE sections included in Universities could rapidly lose their vitality, 
        their ability to react, their relevancy and their levels of productivity.
      Links with Schools
      Links with the secondary education system are most 
        important if the public is to be persuaded that young people 
        do not have to enter Universities to gain access to worthwhile employment. 
        However, it is equally important that whatever training occurs in the 
        secondary sector has credibility with business and industry.
      Links with private providers
      As with schools and Universities, students should be 
        able to articulate and carry credit from private providers into TAFE Institutes 
        and to other providers as part of a national framework. Students need 
        to have confidence that the studies they have undertaken will be of sufficient 
        quality to enable them to move into higher level programs.
      Research and analysis needs to be undertaken to 
        examine the benefits of public/private provider collaboration in some 
        circumstances, rather than assuming that optimum benefits will inevitably 
        flow from market-based policies, in an environment which contains few 
        qf the conditions required for a liable market.
      
      
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