Feature Article Topic: If Students Are Leaving, What Is Your Delivery Model Trying to Tell You? 

Student attrition is often perceived as an inevitable outcome of delivering VET courses. Learners are balancing employment, family responsibilities and other commitments. Circumstances change, motivation fluctuates and, for some, withdrawal from training may simply reflect a shift in personal or professional goals. While these factors undoubtedly influence completion rates, high-performing RTOs are asking a different question. What if attrition is not simply a learner issue, but an early indicator that aspects of the training experience warrant closer examination? 

Under ASQA’s current approach, quality is increasingly demonstrated through an RTO’s ability to understand learner progression, identify barriers to success and respond before students disengage. 

Student Retention Starts at Course Design 

The most effective retention strategies are established long before a student misses a class, requests an extension or withdraws from training. 

Course duration, sequencing, assessment timing, trainer accessibility, expected weekly workload and opportunities for supported practice all influence whether learners can realistically sustain their participation. 

Many delivery models are designed around timetables, funding arrangements or operational efficiency. Fewer are designed around the lived experience of students balancing work, family responsibilities and other competing demands. 

Retention should not be viewed as a student services initiative. It is fundamentally an educational design consideration. 

Academic Progression Data Should Inform Self-Assurance 

Most RTOs collect attendance data or participation evidence, assessment outcomes and learner feedback. The stronger providers use this information proactively. 

Patterns in late submissions, repeated assessment attempts, declining attendance, low engagement, trainer concerns and withdrawal trends often reveal emerging issues with pacing, workload assumptions or support strategies. 

These indicators should not be analysed in isolation. Viewed collectively, they provide valuable insights into whether learners are progressing as intended and whether aspects of the delivery model require refinement. This is self-assurance in practice. 

Intervention Is Most Effective When It Happens Early 

Waiting until learners fail assessments or formally disengage significantly reduces the likelihood of successful re-engagement. Early intervention mechanisms should be designed into the learner journey and supported by clearly defined triggers. 

Examples may include: 

  • Scheduled learner progress reviews; 
  • Attendance and engagement monitoring; 
  • Trainer escalation processes; 
  • Structured wellbeing and study support referrals; 
  • Individualised learning adjustments where appropriate. 

Importantly, interventions should aim to understand why learners are struggling, rather than simply encouraging completion. 

Attrition Is a Quality Indicator 

Not every withdrawal can or should be prevented. However, when patterns emerge, they deserve attention. Consistently high attrition, delayed progression, poor engagement or increased requests for extensions may indicate that assumptions made during course design no longer reflect learner capability, industry expectations or contemporary delivery environments. 

The strongest RTOs do not see retention as a compliance metric. They recognise it as evidence of educational quality. Students who remain engaged, progress as planned and successfully achieve competency provide one of the clearest indicators that a delivery model is appropriately structured, realistically paced and genuinely designed with the learner in mind. 

Ultimately, retaining students is not about keeping them enrolled. It is about creating the conditions that give them the greatest opportunity to succeed. 

Other feature articles: 

Training Plans Don’t Deliver Training: Why Pacing Matters More Than Most RTOs Think  

When Shorter Courses Work And When They Become a Risk   

How Many Hours Are Enough? The Question Still Trapping RTOS in the Old Standards 

When Audit Stops Being an Event: Embedding Self-Assurance into Governance  

The Effectiveness Test: Proving Your Corrective Action Actually Worked  

From Finding to Fix: Why Most Corrective Actions Don’t Actually Correct  

References:  

VET Quality Framework   

National Vocational Education and Training Regulator (Outcome Standards for Registered Training Organisations) Instrument 2025  

ASQA Training Practice Guide  

AQF Volume of Learning