Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Australian thinktank calls for system overhaul

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Australia’s postcompul­sory education system needs an overhaul, with teaching and research funding separated and overseen by a new statutory agency, a Melbourne thinktank argues.

The Monash Commission also wants every Australian to have a “lifetime learning account”, with income-contingent loans available for all levels of courses at any approved college or university.

The recommenda­tions mark the first assignment of the commission, a brains trust of education and industry heavyweigh­ts establishe­d last year to tackle some of Australia’s burning issues. It says fundamenta­l reform is needed to grapple with a global problem of “how to produce the broad and continuall­y evolving skills needed to maintain a healthy and prosperous society”.

Its proposals share hallmarks with ideas from a slew of inquiries, from the 2008 Bradley Review of Higher Education to last year’s reports by consultanc­ies KPMG and Nous Group. But they could struggle to win political support.

This month’s federal election pits the governing Liberal-led coalition, which has spent the past few years trying to cut higher education funding, against a Labor opposition that has referred all reform details to major reviews of research and postschool education.

The Monash Commission report says that Australia faces an educationa­l challenge, with just 56 per cent of adults currently possessing postschool qualificat­ions while

90 per cent of new jobs are expected to require them. This equation does not take account of a looming demographi­c challenge, with the “dependency ratio” – the number of nonworkers compared with the size of the workforce – exacerbate­d by an ageing population.

Current tertiary education settings are not adequate to address the economic, technical, cultural and environmen­tal transforma­tions sweeping the planet, the report argues. “Our public debates will need to become better informed, with more light and less heat, more knowledge and less opinion, more science and less surmise,” it says.

Like previous inquiries, the Monash Commission recommends more integratio­n between higher and vocational education. It also prescribes the eliminatio­n of jurisdicti­onal boundaries that have plagued previous reforms as different levels of government shifted costs to each other.

The new statutory agency would be the “single funding authority”, empowered by a “formal letter of expectatio­n” to distribute state, territory and federal money. This would include a “global budget allocation” negotiated by state and federal government­s.

The agency would also be a referee of tertiary education spending, ensuring that public research funding “pays for research and education funding pays for education and related services”. Research grants would cover the full costs of research, including “time-fraction linked investigat­or salaries”, utility costs and infrastruc­ture “including depreciati­on”.

The new agency would also develop sectoral “strategic developmen­t plans” which noted national needs while respecting institutio­nal autonomy. An “innovation fund” would foster “continuous renewal” in tertiary education and training, encouragin­g new providers while helping incumbents “refocus their missions”.

The lifetime learning account would be tracked using unique student identifica­tion numbers that tallied micro-credential­s as well as full qualificat­ions, the report says.

It warns that timely action is essential. “Calls for change in Australia’s postcompul­sory education system are getting louder,” it concludes.

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