|
This report addresses institution-level monitoring and evaluation,
which is seen as the next challenge for improving the effectiveness
of the vocational education and training (VET) system. The
report argues that monitoring and evaluation at the institution
level are best implemented through self-monitoring and self-evaluation.
A process such as this requires attention to appropriate indices
or measured indicators of trends of institutional performance.
However, these indices are not necessarily the same as those
needed
for system monitoring and evaluation.
Current accountability requirements would appear to be insufficient
for producing and maintaining quality institutions, since
these are designed to service the needs of national system
reporting and accountability rather than individual institutions.
They are not especially appropriatecertainly not sufficientfor
servicing the needs of institutions to manage better.
A new system is needed whereby institutions assume responsibility
for their own improvement on the basis of empirical evidence
of their own health and effectiveness. It is important that
institutions adopt their own methods of data collection tailored
to their own goals, context, characteristics and planning
strategies. This requires attention to both the constraints
on institutional decision-making and the corresponding opportunities
for action. Technical and further education (TAFE) institutions
do not have the same level of autonomy as universities, and
the level of autonomy varies between jurisdictions. Nevertheless,
in all cases, there are many institutional practices that
are controlled locally.
The basis for developing institutional capacity for self-monitoring
and self-evaluation already exists in the Australian Quality
Training Framework. The framework establishes standards for
judging the quality of the institutions delivery and
assessment systems as well as their client services and administrative
systems, and institutions will have to be compliant with them.
One aspect of the standards is the requirement to conduct
an annual audit. Institutions should use this requirement
to implement comprehensive monitoring and evaluation of the
institutional components and programs.
The existing national data collection is too narrow and too
cumbersome to be of much benefit in institutional self-monitoring
and self-evaluation. Some of the data may be relevant and
potentially useful, particularly in the form of benchmarks,
but there are issues of accessibility and immediacy which
need to be overcome to enable these data to be readily useable
for institution-level monitoring and evaluation. Data need
to be collected and used within short timeframes to ensure
their currency and relevance. Further, much of the data relevant
to state or nation-wide systems are not directly applicable
to individual institutions, or are too sparse for reliable
conclusions to be drawn internally. Institution-level monitoring
and evaluation requires reliable data on institutional sub-systems,
departments, units and programs. In addition, monitoring and
evaluation at institution level needs to attend to issues
relevant to local communities and industries, and this requires
tailoring of questions and methods to fit the context.
Institutions need to build their own capacity for data collection
and data analysis. This report offers a model of performance
measures which could be used for this purpose. The model draws
on background theory and practice reviewed in the report and
identifies a range of relevant indices across the three dimensions:
inputs; processes; and outputs/outcomes. These indices will
need to be supported by relevant data drawn from existing
collections (for example, student, staffing and finance),
but with additional measures, particularly those related to
processes (for example, quality of decision-making, institutional
climate and culture) and perceptions of outcomes (for example,
student and employer satisfaction).
The model gives greater priority to the importance of processes
(that is, program characteristics, procedural characteristics)
in linking and establishing relationships between inputs and
outcomes (student achievements), and identifies areas where
prioritised and targeted actions can be taken to improve the
effectiveness of the VET institution. The proposed indices
can be selectively used and supplemented to examine institutional
and program performance at the local level. Investment of
resources in institutional self-monitoring and self-evaluation
systems and processes increases the capacity of the institution
to base planning decisions on deliberate and relevant empirical
information about local institutional performance.
National bodies such as the Australian National Training
Authority (ANTA) and the National Centre for Vocational Education
Research (NCVER) should play a key role in assisting institutions
to build their institutional capacity for self-monitoring
and self-evaluation. These organisations are ideally placed
to develop and provide guidelines, procedures, techniques,
resources and advice, and to disseminate examples of good
practice. Enhancing institutional capacity will require investment
in development and implementation at an institutional level.
Furthermore, institutions will need some assistance in determining
how to develop and implement appropriate strategies and, in
this context, new strategies should ideally build on existing
practice, and emerge through the encouragement of new ideas.
To build on current practice, consideration should be given
to funding case studies of interesting institutional practice.
To promote new ideas, consideration should be given to funding
innovative projects with the potential to provide exemplary
models for other institutions, and as the basis of benchmarking
between institutions.
|