Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      This document has been scanned from the original printed submission. 
        It may contain some errors 
      
Submission 85
      Central Queensland University
      Where Students Come First.
      From the office of the Vice-Chancellor and President
        Professor JLC Chipman
      2 December 1997
      Mr Paul McMahon
        Secretary
        House of Representatives
        Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training
        Parliament House
        CANBERRA ACT 2600
      Re- INQUIRY INTO THE APPROPRIATE ROLES OF INSTITUTES 
        OF TECHNICAL AND FURTHER EDUCATION
      My thanks to the Committee for the opportunity to comment on the matters 
        that relate to the roles of Institutes of Technical and Further Education. 
        My comments are primarily directed toward how the issues are addressed 
        in regional non-capital city communities. Central Queensland University 
        has established a sound working relationship with TAFE Queensland and 
        with the Institutes of TAFE that service the Capricorn and Wide Bay Communities. 
        This has been confirmed by a Memorandum of Understanding between Central 
        Queensland University and TAFE Queensland (copy attached). The Committee 
        may wish to consider the relationship between TAFE and CQU as an exemplary 
        model of practice.
      It would be my pleasure to invite the Committee to a forum in Central 
        Queensland to hear first hand from University and TAFE staff and students 
        about how our Memorandum of Understanding is being acted upon to achieve 
        quality post-secondary opportunities for our communities. Industry representatives 
        and parents could be invited to contribute as well to provide perspectives 
        on the broad range of benefits to be achieved by this practice. The Gladstone 
        community would provide an excellent venue for such a forum since it will 
        enable the Committee to see how the advantages of collaboration can maximise 
        the delivery of post-secondary education in a regional centre. I would 
        be pleased to host such a forum at the CQU Gladstone Campus in collaboration 
        with VET providers at a time in the first quarter of 1988 convenient to 
        the Committee and the Gladstone community.
      There has always existed a tension or ambiguity in provision at the boundary 
        between vocational and higher education. In Central Queensland we have 
        addressed this boundary by maximising collaboration between institutions, 
        and by ensuring credit transfer for students crossing either from TAFE 
        to the University or in the reverse direction.
      Nonetheless, there are some providers of Vocational Education and Training 
        (VET), both public and private, who argue for the right to award a degree. 
        I urge the Committee to reject this view in favour of fostering collaborative 
        arrangements such as those offered by CQU. My reasoning for this is primarily 
        to ensure that each sector of post-secondary education remains focused 
        on their complementary roles. The quality of what is achieved through 
        a competency-based vocational education is judged primarily by industry 
        on the fitness of graduates to demonstrate high standards in vocational 
        practice.
      The quality of what is achieved through a university education must be 
        judged by the generic capacity of graduates. They must demonstrate critical 
        thinking, ethical, original, and creative practice, and the transfer of 
        understanding to novel situations. The challenge for Universities is to 
        strive to achieve and to demonstrate these capacities of their graduates, 
        and to demonstrate the continuing relevance and utility of such capacities 
        in our community. At the boundary between TAFE and Universities there 
        is some overlap between the sectors. This is best addressed by cooperation.
      Allowing VET providers to award degrees could distract from their primary 
        role. By restricting the awarding of degrees to Universities and fostering 
        collaboration with VET providers, the Committee can ensure that each sector 
        of post-compulsory education remains focused. This position is predicated 
        on the expectation that Universities will provide full credit for suitable 
        TAFE studies. While it is my view that the granting of degrees should 
        therefore be restricted to Universities, if TAFE and other VET providers 
        were to be allowed to grant a degree, it could still be differentiated 
        from University studies by assigning the title "Applied" to 
        any such award. There is a precedent for this in the former CAE system 
        where degrees in areas such as Applied Sciences were provided,
      Other areas for expansion of cooperation could include joint international 
        marketing, joint awards, where a person can complete both TAFE and University 
        studies concurrently, and further expansion of the shared use of facilities, 
        especially in regional communities. The Committee would do the community 
        a great service if it were it identified ways of encouraging such collaboration. 
        Currently there are constraints associated primarily with accountability 
        for service provision.
      PROFESSOR J.L.C. CHIPMAN
      Vice-Chancellor and President
      Joint Activity Agreement [not reproduced]
      
      
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