Friday, August 22, 2025

New Canberra Institute of Technology Building

One of Canberra Institute of Technology's new TV studios.
Photo by Tom Worthington, CC-BY, 21 August 2025
Yesterday I had a tour of Canberra Institute of Technology's (CIT) new building in Canberra.  I studied Audio-Visual Video (for training) at what was then the ACT TAFE in 1989 (my last assignment was "Bicycles"). I enrolled again in 2013, at what was then called CIT, for a Certificate IV in Training and Assessment. When I studied video, we used magnetic tape and monochrome studio cameras, so It was a revelation to see the new building. CIT will be showcasing the building and its courses, Thursday 11 September (book online). 

CIT in Woden, 
Photo by Tom Worthington, CC-BY, 21 August 2025

CIT's new building is similar in feeling to Ngee Ann and Temasek Polytechnics in Singapore, which I toured in 2024. There are no lecture theatres, as found in old style institutions. There are some general purpose classrooms, but much of the space is used for specialist teaching rooms. Some of the specialist rooms look like a classroom but with  equipment added for each student to use. Other spaces look like the workplaces the students plan to work in. The chefs learn in a state of the art kitchen (all electric: no gas). The bar staff learn in a bar, restaurant staff in a restaurant, musicians in a recording studio, hairdressers in a salon and video producers in a TV studio. 

Recycling bins at CIT. 
Photo by Tom Worthington, CC-BY, 21 August 2025
The CIT building has one large multipurpose space, which can be used for large scale teaching, events, and musical performances. The spaces between the specialist areas are given over to places where students can sit together to study and work on projects. The building is unusually quiet, in part due to the acoustic panels on walls and lack of a false ceiling. There is the most complicated set of recycling bins I have ever seen: do they really need bins for X-ray and file alarm recycling? ;-) 

There is technology woven into the fabric of the CIT building, but not in an obtrusive way. The classrooms are equipped with the usual digital displays, cameras and video conferencing. But so are booths for small groups of students in the common areas. The large multipurpose space has a huge projection screen which can be lowered to cover one wall. Less obvious are remote control cameras around the room. Throughout the building there are CoWs (Computers on Wheels), which can be positioned to turn anywhere into a learning space.

Lego Cyber Range at CIT Woden, 
Photo by Tom Worthington, CC-BY, 21 August 2025
The cybersecurity teaching area has an unusual cyber range. This is a simulation of the Internet used for practicing detecting and defeating hacking attacks. The cyber range's network is isolated from the public Internet so that no harm is accidently caused to real systems. A cyber range is usually a very abstract place, only existing online. CIT have made an effort to make it more real with a large Lego City layout, depicting part of Canberra. Students can see the effect a cyber attack has on the Lego light rail, public buildings, and airport.

Universities are currently going through a painful process working out what their role is and how they can fund their activities. The vocational education and training (VET) sector doesn't have this problem, as their role is clear and they have always had difficulties with funding. There are some challenging questions for CIT and similar large VET institutions: will universities cooperate with them and leave a role for them, or should they offer their own degrees? Students in the past would undertake a diploma or advanced diploma in VET, and then seek credit towards a university degree. However, universities are now seeking to provide more short and flexible training, encroaching on VET territory. Should VET institutions respond by offering their own vocational degrees?

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