2000
DOI: 10.1080/13636820000200146
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Policy influences on the implementation of vocational education and training in australian secondary schools 1

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…However, they also note a considerable number of weaknesses, including (Malley et al, 2001): multiple objectives caused by the separation between Commonwealth and state governments; problematic applications of quality and benchmark concepts; limited entry-level vocational concepts and qualifications; vague data about participation and retention rates; funding and resourcing difficulties; lack of flexibility, limiting change and innovation; lack of appropriate performance measures; relatively low employer participation; and maintenance of the supply of vocational teachers.…”
Section: Donna Pendergast and Chris Cooper 87mentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, they also note a considerable number of weaknesses, including (Malley et al, 2001): multiple objectives caused by the separation between Commonwealth and state governments; problematic applications of quality and benchmark concepts; limited entry-level vocational concepts and qualifications; vague data about participation and retention rates; funding and resourcing difficulties; lack of flexibility, limiting change and innovation; lack of appropriate performance measures; relatively low employer participation; and maintenance of the supply of vocational teachers.…”
Section: Donna Pendergast and Chris Cooper 87mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…(MCEETYA, 1999b) Malley, Keating, Robinson and Hawke (2001) argue that the strengths of VET in Australian schools are:…”
Section: Donna Pendergast and Chris Cooper 87mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In April 1998, movement towards a national agreement on VET in schools was achieved when federal and state education ministers committed school authorities to NTF and ARF competency-based training packages and procedures. The late 1990s were marked by a rapid expansion of VET subjects and pathways in senior secondary education across Australia (Malley et al 2001). 5.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Despite these problems, it has also been argued that applied learning has helped to democratise the curriculum by increasing retention (Sweet 2008) and engaging disaffected youth (Te Riele and Crump 2002), as well as accommodating the broader range of learners entering school since near-universal participation in secondary schooling became the norm over 20 years ago (Malley et al 2001). Moreover, while these broad patterns suggest a status differentiation in the curriculum and a lack of parity of esteem for vocational learning in secondary schools, they do not examine the views of students themselves (and sub-groups of students) regarding vocational programs in schools.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%