Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors
		
      
Submission 80
      The Australian Federation of University Women Inc (AFUW)
      INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER 
        EDUCATION
       
      Terms of Reference
       the appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further education; 
        and
       the extent to which these roles should overlap with universities.
      The AFUW is pleased to comment on these terms of reference.
      The appropriate roles of institutes of technical and further education
      We are generally supportive of the recent developments in institutes 
        of education, insofar as they serve to increase the options for post-secondary 
        study and qualifications, particularly for women. 
      However it is important to highlight several current positive features 
        of institutes of technical and further education. These relate to their 
        role in the communities they serve and are features which should not be 
        sacrificed in the current drive toward a greater articulation between 
        institute and university courses and awards. These features should be 
        preserved as they are important in keeping a range of options for post-secondary 
        learning available for women and other non-advantaged groups. 
      The main features of institutes of technical and further education in 
        the past which have been very positive for women have been their course 
        and curriculum flexibility, their open access for students, their regional 
        and/or distance education course delivery modes and the opportunities 
        they provided for lifelong adult learning particularly for personal development 
        and subject interest, as well as for accreditation and employment.
      It is to be hoped that these features are not overwhelmed by courses 
        which are exclusively vocationally oriented and pragmatically focussed 
        either on future employment or advanced study. It is our view that for 
        many women what is important about institutes of technical and further 
        education at present are the opportunities they provide for "further 
        education" - broadly defined - as well as "technical education". 
        This requires institutes to retain the potential for curricula and courses 
        to be flexible, so that they are able to be suitably responsive to the 
        needs of their local communities, as well as to those of the employment 
        (or unemployment) market.
      In addition, we think it is important for institutes to maintain their 
        regional location and smaller size as these are very positive features 
        of the current arrangements and are ones which are particularly important 
        in encouraging the less advantaged to access post-secondary education. 
        Institutes have had the potential, probably more so than universities, 
        to serve regional communities through their smaller size, their location 
        outside capital cities or very large population centres and their good 
        facilities for distance education. This makes them particularly "user-friendly". 
        If their present size and location are to be maintained then this would 
        continue to provide a very sensible and accessible opportunity for students 
        to access technical and further education, without the high emotional 
        and financial costs to regional students which would be necessitated through 
        dislocation, travel and accommodation outside their local area. There 
        is of course also the added problem for married women with children of 
        their very severely limited options. 
      With the current under-representation of rural and regional students 
        in higher education in Australia and the obvious deterrents that the cost 
        factors have on these students pursuing tertiary courses outside their 
        local area, it is important to take such human factors issues into serious 
        consideration. Recent experience has shown that cost, dislocation and 
        lack of family support are major deterrents in pursuing further studies. 
        It has also shown that once students leave rural and regional areas to 
        pursue higher education opportunities they are unlikely to return - as 
        the chronic shortage of many professionals in regional Australia so clearly 
        attests.
      We therefore think the roles of institutes of technical and further education 
        should be examined with a much wider context/framework than just that 
        of cost rationalisation and employer needs. There are very important long 
        term, broad social, equity and community issues which should also be addressed, 
        particularly in relation to women and to rural and regional Australia.
      The extent to which these roles should overlap with universities.
      There seems to be no clear and coherent reason why there should be major 
        overlap between the roles of institutes of technical and further education 
        and the universities. Conceptually there are clearly different goals and 
        purposes accepted for the two systems, while pragmatically there is a 
        need for different foci and skills development However what should be 
        the case is a clear and comprehensible description of how courses in the 
        two systems might be articulated satisfactorily and of how more flexible 
        pathways across the systems might allow for greater student opportunities. 
      
      There seems to be little advantage in sacrificing the current variation 
        for a greater uniformity of role. In this era of student-centred learning, 
        differences in learning styles and greater career flexibility, there seems 
        to be no great advantage to students in creating excessive homogeneity 
        in the two systems. Indeed there is everything to be said for preserving 
        and enhancing the diversity. Institutes of technical and further education 
        have provided excellent training in their defined areas of skill, as have 
        universities. 
      What is required is a ongoing examination of how Recognition of Prior 
        Learning (RPL), for example, might be further extended to allow students 
        to move more easily across the systems or to access courses from both 
        systems. In this way, RPL could be used to assist students to tailor courses 
        more suited to their individual needs and interests and to use locally 
        available options. This direction might well be hastened by the likely 
        proliferation of Internet courses and the changes in the traditional roles 
        and geographical boundaries of universities.
      In any role changes however, the main issue should be the clear benefits 
        which would ensue for students, particularly women and other disadvantaged 
        groups. It should certainly be the case that if changes are made they 
        would enhance opportunities for these groups as a matter of priority.
      Submission prepared by 
      Dr Marion Myhill, AFUW Education Convener
      Faculty of Education, University of Tasmania at Launceston
      PO Box 1214
      Launceston TAS 7250
      November 29, 1997
      
        
      
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