Skip to content
Education Training

Shared vision, equal pathways – Report of VET inquiry released

Department of the House of Representatives 2 mins read

The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, Education, and Training has today presented the report of its inquiry into the perceptions and status of vocational education and training (VET).

Committee Chair, Ms Lisa Chesters MP, said ‘high-quality VET is crucial to skilling Australians for an increasingly dynamic economy and labour market. Unfortunately, many people do not fully understand the VET sector or the careers to which it leads, and many still consider VET a less valuable or rewarding pathway compared to university’.

'Governments at all levels must ensure access to reliable, accurate information on VET and actively promote the sector and the fantastic opportunities that it offers, Ms Chesters said.

‘However, information and marketing efforts will not on their own be sufficient to address negative perceptions of VET’, Ms Chesters said. ‘Tangible improvements to the sector must also be made to ensure the quality and relevance of training, and that the sector is subject to robust regulatory, governance, and funding arrangements.'

The Committee has made 34 recommendations designed to address poor perceptions of the sector and enhance the quality of and access to VET pathways. These include:

  • Significantly overhaul the functions of the National Careers Institute.
  • Developing a national careers education strategy for secondary schools.
  • Improving VET delivered to secondary school students via cooperative partnerships and increased school funding.
  • Rationalising the development and implementation of VET qualifications.
  • Addressing systemic barriers to women’s participation in VET, with a focus on eliminating gender-based violence and workplace discrimination and challenging gender stereotypes.
  • Enhancing apprenticeships, including by piloting a network of industry-led apprenticeship support providers, lifting pay and conditions, and exploring new apprenticeship pathways.
  • Creating a robust framework for developing, implementing, and funding micro-credentials.
  • Implementing measures to attract and retain a VET workforce with industry expertise and a greater range of pedagogical competencies.
  • Defining a clear roadmap to a genuinely integrated tertiary education system.

The Committee’s report was informed by other reform processes including the Employment White Paper, the National Skills Agreement, and the Australian Universities Accord. The Committee’s recommendations should be considered alongside the findings of these reports.

The report and further information about the inquiry is available on the inquiry website.

Media inquiries

Ms Lisa Chesters MP, Chair
Korey Fernando, Media Adviser
korey.fernando@aph.gov.au
(03) 5443 9055

For background information

Committee Secretariat
(02) 6277 4573
ee.reps@aph.gov.au

More from this category

  • Education Training
  • 15/01/2025
  • 09:57
Zayed Sustainability Prize

SkyJuice Foundation Wins the 2025 Zayed Sustainability Prize in the Water Category

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates–BUSINESS WIRE– SkyJuice Foundation, a nonprofit organisation dedicated to revolutionising access to clean drinking water based in Sydney, Australia, has…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, General News
  • 10/01/2025
  • 15:51
La Trobe University

Health courses lead La Trobe’s top university offers

Health has once again dominated La Trobe University's top courses among Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre (VTAC) applicants, cementing its reputation as a leader in world-class health education. More than 1400 hard-working students received offers from LaTrobe today as part of VTAC's January first-round offers. This brings the total number of offers from the University, including November and December rounds, to 6683. LaTrobe has increased its VTAC offers for the third consecutive year between the period of November to January. In addition, the University has made more than 4000 offers to direct applicants. This includes those returning to study after a…

  • Education Training, Union
  • 10/01/2025
  • 10:59
National Tertiary Education Union

Monash University admits fresh $7.6 million wage theft scandal

The National Tertiary Education Union has demanded an urgent federal parliamentary inquiry into university governance after Monash University admitted underpaying staff $7.6 million. The new wage theft revelations at Monash are additional to $10 million in previous underpayments at the university, and millions more in alleged underpayments NTEU is pursuing in the Federal Court for unpaid consultation hours. The NTEU is calling for an independent investigation of governance at Monash, alongside a federal parliamentary inquiry into the governance crisis at universities across Australia. The national university wage theft tally is now a confirmed $265 million, with a further $159 million…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.