Minimum and preferred entry qualifications and training provision for North Australian workers
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byBruce Acutt, Paul Hyland, L Miller, Karen Becker
This paper reports on the outcomes of a replication study of asurvey of British employers that requested information on the qualifications sought when recruiting employees and on subsequent training and development. While the British survey was interested in the uptake and use of the British National Vocational Qualifications, the study reported in this article is primarily focused on the uptake and use of the Australian Qualifications Framework qualifications by North Australian employers. This study was prompted by the skills shortages and recruitment difficulties being experienced by organizations throughout rural and regional Australia. Previous studies have found that vocational qualifications were not valued by UK employers and few employers were encouraging employees to undertake vocational awards. If this is also the case in Australia, it may in part explain problems in recruiting skilled workers. This research clearly demonstrates that employees in regional and rural Australia are seeking to improve their knowledge and skills through vocational training and higher education qualifications. Also, employers are providing access to training and are supporting managerial and professional employees to gain higher educational qualifications. When recruiting all types of worker other than unskilled labourers,the majority of organizations prefer to recruit workers with qualifications. In rural and regional centres, however, a more pragmatic stance of recruiting unqualified employees in some areas is observed. Clearly, employers will attempt to minimize training costs by recruiting skilled employees, but in the end they will have to provide access to training and education to ensure that they have a skilled workforce that can deliver essential services and products.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Volume
10
Issue
3
Start Page
195
End Page
211
Number of Pages
17
ISSN
1360-3736
Location
Oxford
Publisher
Blackwell
Language
en-aus
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Education; Faculty of Business and Informatics; TBA Research Institute;
Era Eligible
Yes
Journal
International Journal of Training and Development.