Friday, 29 April 2016

TGM Die Schule der Technic

Meeting and site tour with TGM Die Schule der Technic
I have been very fortunate to meet with the director and lecturers of TGM Die Schule der Technic. TGM is one of the oldest and most respected vocational technical colleges in Austria and they specialise in electronics and Information Technology courses.
Wolfgang Scharl, a representative of the Ministry of education also attended the meeting.
My meeting was extensive, it totally amazed me at the highly technical nature of their courses but also at how professional they are in ensuring the delivery and assessment standards are. They particularly questioned me on the standards of Australian vocational teachers in pedagogical practices. They fired just as many questions at me as I did to them, they are genuinely interested in our vocational system.

·         Meeting participants
o   Wolfgang Scharl, Head of Dept(schools, colleges for engineering, arts and crafts), Federal Ministry of Education and Womens Affairs
o   Karl Reischer, Director, TGM Die Schule der Technic
o   Gerhard Vitovec, Lecturer, TGM Die Schule der Technic
o   Andreas F Dvorak, Lecturer, TGM Die Schule der Technic
Notes from the initial meeting and tour of the facilities and classes

·         Founded in 1879, Motto: Rooted in tradition, Committed to the future
·         2539 students (only 12.7% are female). We discussed the same issue that we are having in Australia with a small number of female students being attracted to our technical careers. TGM are as frustrated and concerned about this as we are.
·         323 teaching staff (22% are female)
·         110 Support and administrative staff
·         They offer courses in:
o   Electrical engineering – power eng, control eng, information eng.
o   Electronics – computer technology, mobile communication
o   Biomedical and health engineering
o   Information Technology – systems and IT, Internet and media
o   Mechanical engineering – Machinery and systems, welding technology, mobile vehicle engineering
o   Applied Mechatronics
o   Plastics engineering – plastics and environmental engineering, sports and design
o   Industrial engineering – Business management, Logistics
o   Electrical Engineering – renewable energy
o   Electronics – IT and network engineering
o   Programming is their biggest course area in IT
·         Delivery modes
o   Fulltime classes
o   Evening courses:
§  Electronics – computing science, biomedical science, telecommunications
§  Industrial Engineering – business management, quality control
§  Foreman course – operations technology
o   Most classes have online resources through their Moodle LMS
o   They don’t appear to have any fully online courses. We discussed the concerns of operating highly practical courses in a fully online mode. Students must have access to prac sessions
o   All courses have a hands on practical requirement with extensive lab time
·         Typical course requirements
o   Very intensive training (37hrs/week Min)
o   Diploma project in 5th year (industry based)
o   Compulsory work placements (8 weeks minimum during holiday periods)
·         Teacher requirements:
o   Minimum 4 years of industry experience
o   Must maintain currency in their technical skills
·         Career Opportunities:
o   Direct entry into employment
o   Access to a University of Applied Science ( credit arrangements are variable and need to be negotiated individually)
o   Occupational title of “Ingenieur” after 3 years of industry experience. This is a new title and role called an “Ingenieur” which is different to other Definitions of engineer. The new definition will fit between university and trade definitions
o   Entitled to be self-employed after 2 years of industry experience (not sure how this is managed or accredited, will need to follow-up with more questions)
·         Students typically take on a 5 year course where the first 2-3 years are spent on core subjects and then completing specialist subjects in years 4-5
·         The student’s final year is based on a major project that has to be undertaken in industry. The final project is not standardised but based on criteria that is fairly general that allows the teacher to make a judgement.
·         Most students need to work at least 2 mths/year in industry prior to the fifth year
·         Students need to manage their own work experience and find their own work placement. The college helps with a network of employers that they can talk to but it is the students responsibility to manage this
·         TGM also operate a Federal Accredited Testing and Inspection Body. They have very highly specialised equipment and facilities to conduct testing of electronic devices. This enables there staff to maintain a very high currency in electronics.
o   EN ISO/IEC 17025
o   EN ISO/IEC 17020
·         The facilities are outstanding with numerous electronic and IT labs. Equipment appears to be very current but they mentioned that it is always challenging to maintain the currency of equipment with tight budgets
·         All courses have core units that deal with
o   communication skills
o   ecological aspects
o   economy and law
·         There are several levels of consultation
o   EU consultation through Cedefop and collaboration tools
o   Ministry led consultation on curriculum and communication between schools, industry, chamber of commerce and trade unions
o   All levels have a standardised survey model to provide feedback to the next level up eg. Students>teachers, teachers>dept management….schools and colleges directly to the Ministry. This ensure that all levels are aware of the views of other stakeholders. Feedback is recorded in a highly standardised way so it can be analysed in detail. (It would be good to see this data of the tool but not sure if this is appropriate to ask for)
o   Final standardised exams in core generalist subjects must have a educational leader from another college to administer the exam and ensure its validity. Technical exams are not standardised because of the differences between technical subjects
·         Their doesn't appear to be a complex validation process for writing assessments. “Teachers are our experts, employers are our experts” they know how to assess. The teachers are very resistant to any process that distracts them from teaching and assessment.
·         Cost of education approx 75 euro per year. They commented on how expensive our (Australian) education system was. I met 1 teacher who had studied at Monash uni and another that wanted to study in Australia but found it too expensive

Following the initial meeting I had an extensive tour of their facilities including:
  • ·         Federal Accredited Testing and Inspection facilities – in the same building complex but operated independently to the teaching facilities
  • ·         Electronics classes and labs
  • ·         IT classes and labs
High Voltage test lab 100,000 Volts

Networking labs
Test facilities



It lab



2 comments:

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  2. wow - 75 euro per year to study! and interesting point around teachers resisting any distraction from teaching and assessing - some things do not change across the world - teachers want to teach and do what they do well!

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