Microcredentials standardised at last

“Microcredentials allow job seekers to demonstrate more specific skills than is 
possible using ‘macrocredentials’ such as university degrees  – as well as 
allowing individuals to have their skills “recognised in a more timely manner 
than is possible with macrocredentials ... A microcredential is a certification 
of assessed learning or competency, with a minimum volume of learning of one 
hour..”

The quickest way to upskill ...

By David Braue on Mar 24 2022 01:53 PM
https://ia.acs.org.au/content/ia/article/2022/microcredentials-standardised-at-last.html


The government has released its National Microcredentials Framework (NMF) to 
unify the emerging education sector.

Recognising the lack of consensus about just what a microcredential is and how 
it should be recognised by employers, an expert working group developed the 
framework after examining over 35 different organisations’ definitions of the 
word – and consulted with over 120 individuals from 70 academic, business and 
training organisations in the process.

https://www.dese.gov.au/higher-education-publications/resources/national-microcredentials-framework

“Technological change, coupled with rapid transformation brought about by 
COVID-19, have elevated the potential for microcredentials to rapidly upskill 
and reskill the workforce,” the report’s authors note while adding that “the 
microcredentials ecosystem is disparate, lacking even a consistent definition 
across higher education, vocational education, and industry.”

“A framework can help reduce complications for learners seeking to make a 
decision on what to learn, for recognising bodies or providers seeking to 
recognise a microcredential for credit, and for employers or professional 
bodies seeking to understand the learning outcomes and capabilities of 
employees.”

The standard sets a national definition of microcredentials, agrees on unifying 
principles for the courses, establishes critical information requirements, and 
outlines a minimum standard that microcredentials must meet to be featured on 
the government’s new Microcredentials Marketplace.

https://theconversation.com/microcredentials-what-are-they-and-will-they-really-revolutionise-education-and-improve-job-prospects-169265

That marketplace – which was announced by the government in June 2020 and 
awarded to the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) last July – will provide a 
consistent view of available microcredentials that will enable potential 
students to compare short courses and ‘stack’ them to build complete 
qualifications whose clarity will make them more helpful for potential 
employers.

To be included in the Microcredentials Marketplace, microcredential 
institutions must provide clear learning outcomes and transparent assessments; 
use Australian Core Skills Framework descriptors; and stipulate the volume of 
learning, which must be more than one hour and less than a formal Australian 
Qualifications Framework (AQF) qualification.

Microcredentials may use “best-fit or estimate” techniques to recognise 
non-credit-bearing microcredentials; reflect industry recognition, where they 
are recognised by professional bodies as counting towards an industry or vendor 
certification; and clearly demonstrate credit recognition against AQF criteria, 
where applicable.

The NMF also requires authorities to provide a “statement of assurance of 
quality” that describes the provider, its quality assurance processes, and the 
processes by which the microcredentials are reviewed and updated.

“It is hoped that the development and implementation of this framework in 
conjunction with the Marketplace will encourage greater cohesion in the design, 
development and delivery of microcredentials across both the Australian 
education system and broader industry,” the report notes.

Disrupting the unis

Australia’s “massively fragmented and tough” credentialing innovation sector 
has long kept it lagging behind regional innovators like Singapore, Malaysia 
and the EU, warned Dr Katy McDevitt, a former Deakin University microcredential 
designer who is now chief learning officer at multinational microcredentials 
provider HEX – which has affiliations with 37 universities and has worked with 
over 5,000 students.

The NMF “is a major practical contribution towards making it simpler for 
education providers to get traction in designing meaningful credentials,” 
McDevitt said, warning that “tech-powered transformations are happening at a 
phenomenal pace.”

“The longer we spend defining the basics of a form of education technology that 
has now existed for the best part of a decade, the more out of step we become 
with the real and fast emerging future needs of the economy.”

Momentum for microcredentials has been building in recent years as increasing 
demand for current IT and other skills challenges universities that require 
years of commitment to complete broad degrees whose specific deliverables are 
often hard for employers to evaluate.

In 2019, a review of the AQF warned that existing “highly generic” credentials 
were unsuitable for the modern workforce and relied on outcome statements that 
were “not meaningful” in a world characterised by “a constant state of 
disruption and innovation.”

Aiming to help workers better understand the skills they need to get IT jobs, 
organisations such as the Australian Computer Society (ACS) and OpenLearning 
have worked to establish standards for microcredentials – but the NMF aims to 
simplify the landscape by mapping these and other courses against common 
definitions.

Standardising the currently disjointed market for microcredentials – and 
ensuring that certifications are universally recognised – could threaten the 
tertiary sector’s long-held control over formal knowledge acquisition, former 
educational director and consultant Paul Corcoran argued in a recent evaluation 
of the sector’s biggest challenges.

“Current discussions around microcredentials sometimes have the feel of an 
answer in search of a question,” he said, noting that “the virtues of 
microcredentials are being extolled but take-up is fragmented and stakeholders 
appear to have mixed views on the utility and quality of those credentials.”

Microcredentials allow job seekers to demonstrate more specific skills than is 
possible using ‘macrocredentials’ such as university degrees, Corcoran notes in 
advocating for a standardised national framework – as well as allowing 
individuals to have their skills “recognised in a more timely manner than is 
possible with macrocredentials”.


DAVID BRAUE
David Braue is an award-winning technology journalist who has covered 
Australia’s technology industry since 1995. A lifelong technophile, he has 
written and edited content for a broad range of audiences across myriad topics, 
with a particular focus on the intersection of technological innovation and 
business transformation.

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