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Dumbing it down: where do standards fit?

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 13:31 authored by Lyn Alderman
In Australia, Vocational Education and Training (VET) programs are delivered in a variety of settings. You can be enrolled within a course in a high school, at a technical institution, private training provider or at your place of employment. Recognition of prior learning, on the job training and industry partnerships are strong factors supporting the change of delivery. The curriculum content within these programs has also changed. For example within the Business Services programs, the prerequisite and corequisite skill of touch keyboarding to an Australian Standard has moved from a core requirement in the 1990’s to an elective requirement in the 2000’s. Where a base skill becomes an elective skill, how does this effect the performance and outcomes for the learner, educator, employer and society as a whole? This paper will explore these issues and investigate the current position of standards within the VET curriculum today.

History

Source title

Proccedings of the Learning Conference 2004 (Presented in the International Journal of Learning Vol. 11)

Name of conference

Learning Conference 2004: the Eleventh International Literacy and Education Research Network Conference on Learning

Location

Havana, Cuba

Start date

2004-06-27

End date

2004-06-30

Pagination

1007-1012

Publisher

Common Ground

Place published

Altona, Vic.

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Business and Law

School

School of Law and Justice

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