Education and training workforce: Vocational education and training

Research report

  • The Vocational Education and Training (VET) workforce builds Australia's human capital and contributes to its economic prosperity by equipping workers with the skills that industry needs. The VET workforce also contributes to social inclusion and civic participation.
  • There are nearly 5000 Registered Training Organisations (RTOs), ranging from large, broad-based Technical and Further Education (TAFE) institutes to private sector and enterprise-based RTOs of varying size and scope.
  • The VET workforce comprises about 73 000 TAFE employees and an estimated 150 000 who work for other VET providers. It includes trainers and assessors, other professionals and general staff. It has a greater proportion of part-time, casual and older workers, compared with the general labour force.
  • VET trainers and assessors are required to be 'dual professionals', having both industry currency and educational capabilities.
  • At an aggregate level, the current VET workforce numbers, profile and capability meet many of the existing demands on the VET sector.
  • However, some clear deficiencies should be addressed. The VET sector requires:
    • more trainers and assessors with industry skills in demand
    • greater attention to meeting changing contemporary skills needs
    • and a wider base of the VET workforce that has at least basic educational capabilities.
  • A confluence of demographic, economic and regulatory factors will introduce greater challenges for the VET sector over coming years. Necessary reforms, that will improve the VET workforce's capacity and capability, include:
    • a more flexible industrial relations regime in the TAFE sector, to facilitate recruitment and retention in areas of skill scarcity
    • more consistent delivery of the Certificate IV in Training and Assessment (TAA) to the required regulatory standard, to improve basic educational capability and consumer confidence. All practitioners in the VET sector should hold a teaching qualification commensurate with their role
    • action to remedy gaps in the:
      • delivery of higher-level qualifications
      • assessment of Recognition of Prior Learning and of Current Competency
      • use of information and communication technologies
      • development of managerial and leadership skills
    • the deployment of strategies that enhance the contemporary vocational competence of those workers withlong tenures or who are employed only in the VET sector
    • more targeted and evidence-based professional development that addresses identified capability requirements of the workforce.
  • Better data - particularly covering the private VET sector - are urgently required to inform policy strategies and assist with workforce planning.