NEWS DESK
CEOâs career âan educationâ Neil Walker neil@baysidenews.com.au WHEN Maria Peters looks back on a 30-year career at Chisholm TAFE Institute she says it is the camaraderie between staff she will miss most of all in retirement. The CEO decided last year to step down at Chisholm Institute on 31 December and hand over the chief executive officer reins of the vocational education collegeâs campuses to successor Dr Richard Ede. âI know Iâll miss the people and Iâll miss the intellectual stimulation but Iâm just looking to have some time to re-energise and Iâll always have my eye on Chisholm and Iâm sure itâll go on to bigger and better things.â Chisholm TAFE Institute has nine campuses across Victoria including a Frankston and a Rosebud campus. Ms Peters, who hung up the CEO spurs for the final time on the last day of 2017, says her three decades working in the education sector has been marked with change and there has been no time more turbulent and challenging than the past few years. Sector budget cuts made restructuring Chisholmâs operations a top priority. âYou can only get through a lot of change with the support of wonderful people from staff right through to leaders in the business,â she said. âThere have been some wonderful but also some challenging times. âI think the board and leadership team and the board decided to control its own destiny by making some tough
College gone
FORMER Chisholm TAFE Institute CEO Maria Peters says competition from registered training organisations made life tough for TAFE providers across the state. Evocca College closed its Frankston campus last year amid criticism of low graduation rates. âThey werenât alone but at the end of the day quality and integrity shone through,â Ms Peters said. âWhat I feel sad about is that it had an impact on individuals and maybe theyâve ended up with debts that they didnât fully understand they were going to incur and perhaps with a qualification thatâs not going to help them achieve the career that they wanted.â decisions earlier to make sure weâre here for the long haul.â The arrival of privately-operated registered training organisations (RTOs) meant TAFE colleges effectively found themselves competing with the private sector for students. Ms Peters says Chisholm Institute saw the writing on the wall early on and decided to change its courses to become more industry focused to provide training for jobs where there was a growing need for graduates. âThey were hard times ... contestability did threaten everything that we stood for.â She said working with students has been rewarding over the past three decades. âI didnât realise just how much of an impact it could make to an individualâs life or communities and industries. âThe sectorâs going through a bit of change and turbulence but I believe the
TAFE sector does make a difference better than anyone else.â Change is visible at Chisholmâs Frankston campus which is in the midst of a $75.9 million rebuild as part of a joint state government and Chisholm project to upgrade the TAFE training centre. The departed CEO says the development will be completed by the end of 2018 and new buildings and planned courses at Frankston will see the TAFE education provider strengthen its ties with industry to give students the opportunity to turn their qualifications into a career. Service jobs in health and nursing, hospitals and early childhood education in the region are booming and Ms Peters says even though automation is changing manufacturing businesses, automation will bring some of its own jobs including cybersecurity and ânew types of employmentâ in IT.
âThe Frankston redevelopment will help people for involvement for the jobs of now and jobs in the future,â she said. âWeâre hoping by 2022 in partnership with LaTrobe University to have up to 22 degrees offered.â As for the retiring Ms Peters, she says she will always remember her time at Chisholm with fondness. âThe view for Chisholm is quite spectacular. Iâm just a passing custodian but itâs been an incredible journey and privilege. âItâs been a really tough decision to retire. Iâve been here 30 years. I started as an educator. I think itâs just time now. The organisation is in a good place.â She is looking forward to not having a diary laying out the year ahead for her as CEO. âIt feels very liberating to not know what tomorrow brings.â
The departed: Former Chisholm Institute CEO Maria Peters. Picture: Supplied
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Frankston Times 5 February 2018