Post-secondary institution should recruit students in proportions that reflect the region they serve, writes Stuart Middleton I was astounded to read recently that Alaska State University had announced in tones seemingly ambivalent, shocked and celebratory that a milestone had been ...
More »Infrastructure funds float off as floods shift priorities
Infrastructure funds reside in the fiscal equivalent of a floodplain. They can shoot up quickly, but they can get swamped just as easily. Last week’s cuts – to pay for the reconstruction of Queensland’s flood-damaged infrastructure – are the latest ...
More »TAFE earns compensation
Providers deserve payments for community service activities, says John Mitchell. Observers may be surprised by some of the recommendations in the Productivity Commission’s recent draft report on the VET workforce. One is that VET providers, and TAFE institutes in particular, ...
More »After this, then what?
There’s no metric for inspiration, writes Dario Toncich. The expression post hoc ergo propter hoc (after this, therefore because of this) could well be applied to the strategic philosophies being pursued by Australia’s universities and their masters. In recent years, ...
More »Unis leaving the land?
The time has arrived for action on agricultural education, write Simon Livingstone and Peter Smith. Food and Agriculture Organisation data from 2008 estimates there are 6.5 billion people in the world, and this is likely to climb to 9.3 billion ...
More »Downstream effects
A focus on technology has scuppered old-fashioned technical skills, writes Stuart Middleton. There is a lot of talk these days about technology and its impact on our lives, the role it plays in an information economy and, of course, the ...
More »Not such a downturn
If the GFC had never happened, a future Australia would have just 1 per cent more tradespeople, writes Tom Karmel. One of the most obvious effects of the economic downturn on apprentices was the decline in the numbers starting an ...
More »Red books don’t mean red faces
Leaking is all the rage. But is it art or artifice, wonders John Ross. It’s been a wet summer, for the media as well as everyone else. On top of a deluge of flood stories, reporters tapped into a steady ...
More »Hall’s title at least includes tertiary education
Sections of ALP regard universities as no more than glorified skills factories, writes Paul Rodan In the recent Victorian election campaign, the parlous condition of the state’s leading export industry, international education, received virtually no attention from political parties or ...
More »One year on NZ passes tertiary high school legislation
A pathways project in slow motion A day might be a long time in politics but a year is a mere flick of the eyelid in education systems where change proceed at a pace that makes glaciers look like films ...
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