White Rabbit said:
Some courses are harder to get into at TAFE than at Uni.
They're in the minority.
Take nursing, all you need is a 60 - 70 UAI in order to study at Uni, where as the TEN program offered through TAFE is far more compeditive and also takes in more than your UAI. You see, Uni relies on one thing and one thing alone - marks based on one year in high school and a few exams at the end. It's a rather ridiculous way to judge someones ability to achive in a course, and their level of intelligence IMO. TAFE on the other hand requires more the completion or either Year 10 or 12, you need to have a decent personality and actually show some ability to adequatly perform the job you plan to study. Nursing, for example, won't allow someone eith absolutley no social skills to enrol, where as they could get into Uni.
Yes, TAFE has a better selection method. This doesn't make the actual teaching side of it better. UWS law could suddenly take people in after singing auditions, but that woulnd't make it a better law campus. Don't confuse selection criteria with why people actually go there.
Yes, in some cases it's a form of alternative entry when your UAI doesn't meet cut offs, but in other cases, it provides a more practical, hands on form of study or provide more direct entry into certain fields.
There, you said it. 'certain fields'. That's exactly right, because no unis really offer plumbing, or hairdressing, or practical electrician training. (Although they do offer nursing, one of the few crossovers between tafe and uni)
And, as shocking as this may sound, TAFE can also provide BETTER courses than Uni, they can actually be more benifical to students than Uni.
Care to justify that statement?
Although there are some crossovers, like nursing, most of the TAFE courses are shorter, and more 'practical'. You can't get a Bachelor of Arts in Japanese from TAFE: you can't do three years of Japanese, with cool subjects like Manga studies, comparitive history, in-country opportunities, the Japanese club, Japanese competitions- but you can do Japanese at TAFE.
Don't pretend TAFE and Uni have the same purpose.
Although a lot of people go to TAFE when they can't get into uni, TAFE is a place to get practical hands-on training. Practical things that are taught there, like languages, IT, nursing (which is a totally practical field, anyway), hairdressing etc, are always taught from a far different perspective to uni.
Don't pretend everyone here is TAFE bashing. We prefer uni because we prefer uni for what we do. Just because we don't go to TAFE and because we're un-PC enough to admit that students who want things offered by uni but go to TAFE (eg, want to do law, but do legal studies at TAFE) haven't been able to go to uni.