Australia’s new tertiary education authority clears parliament
While the Australian Tertiary Education Commission (ATEC) has been operating in an interim capacity, legislation to formally establish it passed parliament on March 31, as the government moves to reform tertiary education following a recommendation from the Australian Universities Accord.
“Of all things in the Accord, I think this is the most important. This is real long-term systemic reform,” said education minister Jason Clare.
The ATEC will steer higher education reform, balancing domestic priorities with international growth. It will act as an independent steward for the system, overseeing implementation of reforms aimed at lifting participation, improving equity, and strengthening links between vocational and higher education.
The ATEC will be responsible for allocating funding under the new government’s new ‘managed growth’ system, overseeing national standards, and producing an annual report on the state of the tertiary education system.
“Instead of the hunger games we have at the moment where universities are encouraged to be the same size and eat each other alive for students, the ATEC will help us build something different. It will help us build a system that’s bigger than we have today, double the size,” continued Clare.
Instead of the hunger games we have at the moment where universities are encouraged to be the same size and eat each other alive for students, the ATEC will help us build something different
Jason Clare, education minister
“It will look at how to make it easier to move between university and TAFE and make getting the skills you need quicker and cheaper. It will be independent. It will be able to tell government things they don’t want to hear and call out the things that need to happen next. This is all part of our work to build a better and fairer education system,” added Clare.
Meanwhile, minister for skills and training Andrew Giles described the establishing of the ATEC as a “great milestone for education and training in Australia”.
“We now have a dedicated body to drive the work to bring our university and vocational education and training sectors closer together. The establishment of the ATEC makes real our ambitions for a joined up tertiary education system, in which vocational and higher education pathways are equally valued.”
A number of amendments were accepted to the bill, including an increase in the number of commissioners – a move welcomed by Renée Leon, vice-chancellor of Charles Sturt University, who is now urging the government to ensure that one of these is a designated regional commissioner.
“The Accord’s core ambition is to lift participation and attainment in higher education for disadvantaged Australians, including those living in the regional communities we serve,” she said.
“As we have previously stated, regional Australians deserve a higher education system that supports their aspirations and strengthens their communities. More than 80% of Charles Sturt’s regional students go on to live and work in regional Australia after graduation.”
“We remain committed to working constructively with the Commission once its work commences. The Accord’s core ambition is to lift participation and attainment in higher education for disadvantaged Australians, including those living in the regional communities we serve,” said Leon.
Leon said that the ATEC’s decisions will “determine whether universities like Charles Sturt can continue to educate the doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, agricultural scientists and allied health professionals regional Australia’s communities urgently need”.
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