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Explore the shifting landscape of VET practitioner roles amidst industry demands, technological advancements, and evolving teaching practices. Learn key competencies, skills, and knowledge needed to thrive in the dynamic VET sector.
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What does this mean at the coalface? • Operating in a competitive market • Keeping up to date with changes in VET • Flexible delivery • Working with Training Packages • Using technology • Balancing industry’s needs with educational needs • Understanding the changing nature of work • Becoming learner centred - facilitating
The changing context • Competency based training and assessment • Constant reviews of national training frameworks • National accreditation • Industry led VET sector • AVTS to MAATS to New Apprenticeships • User choice and in Victoria – contestability • Increased focus on access and equity • New learning technologies • Constant restructures – merging of TAFEs, changing of State Training Authority personnel
Impact on teaching practice • Increased emphasis on currency of teacher’s knowledge • Demand for greater diversity of teaching methods in range of contexts • Greater emphasis on assessment • Increased responsiveness to the needs of industry • Heightened awareness of appropriateness of relationships between teachers and students
New skills • Dealing with diverse range of learners • Working collaboratively across a range of contexts and locales • Addressing embedded key competencies e.g. Generic employability skills, sustainability • Increasing demand for pedagogical knowledge • Working with enterprises to encourage the uptake of learning cultures
Online learning skills • Online delivery = job redesign • Blurring of specialist functions e.g. Program design and teaching • Relationship building in an online environment • Dynamic and continually changing environment requiring knowledge, critical reflection to ensure ‘meaning making’ • Work/life balance
Defining characteristics of this new professional • Self-management • Marketer and promoter of educational product • Willingness to change and apply skills in a wide range of new contexts • Commitment to and promotion of lifelong learning • Involvement in organisational development activities as part of working role
Perception of sector of change drivers External Internal • Government policy • Funding model • Public sector restructuring • Performance agreements • Competition • Trends in online technology • VETiS • Changing relationship between public and private RTOs • Globalisation • Labour market changes and demands • Client demands • Collaboration – one stop shops • Increased expectations (responsiveness) • Rethinking pedagogy • Changing shape of TAFE/VET • Casualisation of the workforce • Changing work conditions • Changing demongraphics
Manifestation of these drivers • Changes in recruitment and career pathways • Changes to the role and status of VET • Emergence of the term ‘VET professional’
Use of technology • Flexible delivery/online delivery • Budgeting/finances • Understanding of the VET sector • Further VET qualifications • Workplace assessment/ learning • Time management • Working with Training Packages • Networking • Increasing/maintaining knowledge of industry area • Achieving a work/life balance • Meeting regulatory requirements and understanding the role of State Training Authorities
Quality Client-driven Governance Responsiveness Competition Regulation Sector/System Reform
Ref: Doyle & McDonald, 2002. Smith, 2004. Mitchell & Ward, 2010.
3. Ideas Awareness, exposure, lurking Making sense of information, organising ideas, creativity Conversations, Collaborations 2. Communities & Networks 1. Individual Establishing & maintaining relations Source: Efimova. 2004. p.12.