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Skills shortage can be alleviated, says TAFE

Skills shortage can be alleviated, says TAFE
by Steve Crowe
Sep 24, 2008
Find more like: TAFE | NSW | Allan | Wetherell | skills | shortage | printing | industry | training | Australian | Qualifications | Framework

To help overcome skills shortages in the print industry, training institutions, both government-funded and private, are keen to promote accelerated apprenticeships and higher qualifications for those already working in the industry.

TAFE NSW manager of Printing and Graphics Programs, Allan Wetherell, has used PANPA and a meeting in Sydney to promote the fact that training institutions are well situated to provide “competency”-based training and skills assessment for workers who may have acquired skills through on-the-job experience, but lack formal qualifications.

Under the aegis of the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF), the ICP05 Printing and Graphic Arts Training Package contains 360 competency standards and 34 qualifications for the print industry, with eight streams of competence. The AQF provides a comprehensive, nationally-consistent framework for all qualifications in higher education.

According to Wetherell, the system provides funding from the federal government for employers who wish to see employees undergo an apprenticeship or accelerated apprenticeship, or to upgrade their present skills. Not only does this deliver benefits for the business, but it also aids in alleviating the skills shortage the industry is currently struggling through.

“We’ve failed miserably over the years to get young people into the industry,” Wetherell told a breakfast meeting this morning. “This system provides recognition of prior learning. A lot of companies are sitting on a goldmine with their people.”

Wetherell pointed to the fact that in the early 1990s there were approximately 250 first-year print apprentices at TAFE NSW, whereas there are now only about 60. Likewise, the number of pre-press apprenticeships has gone from 160 in the 1990s to just 15 or 20 this year. Consequently, new ways to find skilled people have become necessary.

“Manufacturers are partly to blame because they now produce machines that are much more productive and don’t require the same labour,” he quipped.

However, Wetherell added that “the industry lacks a far-reaching vision and long-term strategy. The solution needs to come from three groups – industry, the enterprise, and training organisations.”

Accelerated apprenticeships provide opportunities for workers who have some experience and wish to progress to formal qualifications. Wetherell suggested that print training has been turned on its head in the past 15 years to meet industry expectations, and is now flexible and “negotiable” in its ability to meet employers halfway.

“Change your business for the better,” he told the meeting. “Raise the bar for your employees. Just do it.”


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Comments: 2
I don't know where this fellow gets his information from but I've had over 30 years experience in the trade & have been retrenched twice in the last 15 months, the last being in Nov '08. Since then I have applied for numerous jobs in the trade & don't even get a get a reply.(Typical of today's management). If he thinks there is a skills shortage tell him to look at how many people that have been retrenched & have had to go into other fields as a result of JOB SHORTAGES. In my mind the printing trade is a joke & if I had my time over again I would not waste my time getting involved in it.
Proprint Magazine - comments icon Posted by Chris LawtonFeb 19, 2009 3:11 PM
yeah chris, fellow sackee, lets not beat around the bush, i am working casual through an agency, i was retrenched in april, last year. i get a lot of work, but the uncertainy is the killer..the industry doesnt seem to be putting permanents on, its all casual, from what i see each week, this bloke and others like him, are not of this planet, believe me. i am 62, and cant retire till 64, not much super, and thats my fault, but i have been working 1 to 5 days constantly since april, if that is any help to you
Proprint Magazine - comments icon Posted by not againFeb 20, 2009 9:53 PM
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