Top of page
Education and Employment

Nursing, aged care and disability training hub

A professional caretaker in uniform helping a geriatric female patient on a wheelchair

TasTAFE students will be better equipped for the workforce and trained to the latest industry standards following the opening of a state-of-the-art nursing, aged care and disability hub at the Alanvale campus.

The facilities are part of a $4 million campus upgrade and include simulated hospital wards, aged care and disability spaces, along with a nurse’s station, task training rooms, classrooms and tech labs.

These replica real work facilities provide students with job-ready skills and experiences before entering the workforce, and the opportunity to train on the latest equipment.

Nursing, aged care and disability are some of TasTAFE’s most popular courses with around 90 per cent of graduates in these areas gaining employment at the completion of their training.

The move from the outdated, inner-city site will enable TasTAFE to increase its intake of enrolled nurses by another full group with an additional 30 nurses trained and ready for work in Tasmania. It will also see more students studying to be aged care and disability workers, meeting the needs of the growing health care sector.

The facility was designed and built by Tasmanian companies ARTAS and VOS Construction, supporting the economy and local jobs at a time when we need it most.

Work on the next stage of the Alanvale redevelopment, including an expanded library/learning hub for students, a new student lounge and classroom upgrades will begin this year.

You might also like

The Build-A-Brush includes modular components that adapt as children grow, allowing kids to select the bits that appeal to them in the moment while ergonomic forms and visual cues build self-assurance, refine cognitive skills, and encourage consistency. The Build-A-Brush includes modular components that adapt as children grow, allowing kids to select the bits that appeal to them in the moment while ergonomic forms and visual cues build self-assurance, refine cognitive skills, and encourage consistency.

Build-A-Brush: Making oral health fun and easy for children with cognitive disabilities

For many children with cognitive disabilities, daily routines such as…

pregnant woman pregnant woman

New care guidelines for pregnant women with IBD

This physician-scientist’s research changed everything for women. Here’s what she…

Patients who have suffered a stroke perform recovery activities with the help of nurses in the recovery program at Hospital Patients who have suffered a stroke perform recovery activities with the help of nurses in the recovery program at Hospital

Aussies urged to not hang up on vital stroke support service

Aussies are being urged to dig deep to ensure the…

The image of the human brain The image of the human brain

Dementia now Australia’s leading cause of death, ABS reports

The latest data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS)…