Professional Documents
Culture Documents
VOCATIONAL
EDUCATION(SPPE2022-01)
PREPARED BY
KHAIRUL BIN OSMAN
A14PP3025
TO
DR MOHD ZOLKIFLI BIN ABD HAMID
Department of Educational Foundation and Social Science
Faculty of Education
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
Introduction
In Australia, TVET is known widely as VET. It became a sensational issues by industrial bodies and
stakeholders. Issues that have been commonly discuss is transferability skills or employability skills.
Nevertheless, at present they are a broad category called key skills competencies that describe the
combination language, literacy and numeracy and other skills to successfully participate in
professional activity. They acknowledged that these skills are manifested in different ways technical
discipline and the specific conditions. Study details were determined and also the event will be
examined in more detail.
Transferable multi-skills
The researcher pointing out that possessing transferable skills can helped to shape Australian
VET. Many strategies had been carried out and will be created in the future by the
Government to develop vocational as first class vocational in Australia. This is because
vocational training provide the people skills that is required to expand the market and
simultaneously increasing the economic level which make the nation prosper. This can be
proven by thee Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) and the Business
Council of Australia proposed an Employability Skills Framework (Core Skills for Work
Framework) since 2013 to replace the key competencies. Eight skills are identified in the
framework consist of communication, teamwork, problem-solving, initiative and enterprise,
planning and organizing, self-management, learning and technology. The government want to
develop a teacher which possess transferable skills to educate their students. Transferable
skills relevant to VET appear in the Australian Core Skills Framework, which has a literacy
and numeracy focus, while the Australian Qualifications Framework, which applies to
qualifications in both the VET and higher education sectors, includes transferable skills.
Conclusion
Enthusiasm and commitment, and the development of transferable skills in vocational
education and training was approved by the majority of stakeholders in Australia. Research
must continue to be carried out on. More research in this area will continue to inform and
enrich the debate with respect to policy and practice. In order to obtain the global benefits of
this research, and the need for regional and cross-Inter-regional cooperation is essential.
Australia hopes to remain part of Regional Cooperation platform ( RCP )