How VET’s competency frameworks have embedded cross-cultural capability for decades, and what still needs improving for CALD learner outcomes
The “Emerging” Skill That Has Been Here All Along
LinkedIn’s Skills on the Rise 2026 report placed cross-cultural communication prominently among Australia’s fastest-growing professional skills. The accompanying commentary from business leaders, career coaches, and corporate trainers celebrated it as an essential capability for the modern workforce, an area where professionals must urgently invest to stay relevant. Commentators described it as a signal of what the future of work demands, a competitive edge in an AI-saturated economy, and a skill that separates leaders from the rest.
For anyone who has spent time working in or with Australia’s vocational education and training sector, this celebration of cross-cultural communication as a newly emerging skill produces a particular kind of recognition: the recognition that VET has been doing this work, formally, systematically, and as a regulatory requirement, for a very long time. The unit CHCDIV001 Work with diverse people has required learners across community services, health, education, and customer-facing qualifications to demonstrate cross-cultural communication competence as a mandatory capability, not an optional add-on. The Australian Core Skills Framework has embedded intercultural communication within its description of foundation skills for years. And the Principles of Assessment have always required RTOs to deliver assessments that are fair, flexible, and responsive to the diverse cultural contexts of their learners.
This is not to diminish the importance of the LinkedIn findings. The corporate world’s growing recognition of cross-cultural communication as a critical workforce capability is welcome and overdue. But it does require an honest accounting of where Australia’s VET sector stands: structurally ahead in embedding cross-cultural skills through competency frameworks, but still grappling with persistent gaps in outcomes for culturally and linguistically diverse learners. The challenge for 2026 is less about inventing new skills and more about closing the distance between what VET teaches and what CALD learners actually experience in the labour market.
Drawing on extensive experience working with registered training organisations across Australia, this article examines how VET has embedded cross-cultural communication, where RTOs are genuinely ahead of the broader workforce conversation, where significant gaps remain, and what the sector must do to ensure that cross-cultural competence translates into equitable outcomes for every learner.
1. How VET Has Embedded Cross-Cultural Communication for Decades
1.1 CHCDIV001: More Than Awareness Training
The unit CHCDIV001 Work with diverse people has long served as a cornerstone of cross-cultural capability in VET. It applies to all workers, not just specialists in diversity or multicultural affairs, and requires learners to work respectfully with people from diverse social and cultural groups and situations, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The unit appears across multiple qualifications in the CHC Community Services Training Package and related packages, making it a mandatory competency for hundreds of thousands of VET learners each year in fields ranging from aged care and disability support to children’s services, mental health, and community development.
What distinguishes CHCDIV001 from the corporate “cross-cultural communication” workshops now being celebrated as emerging practice is the depth and specificity of what the unit demands. This is not awareness training or sensitivity modules delivered in a two-hour lunch-and-learn session. It is a structured competency that requires learners to demonstrate, through assessed performance against defined criteria, that they can reflect on their own social and cultural perspectives and biases, use work practices that make environments safe for all people, communicate in ways that build effective relationships, mutual trust, and confidence with diverse people, and address cross-cultural misunderstandings with sensitivity and professional judgement.
The following table maps the four elements of CHCDIV001 to the specific capabilities learners must demonstrate and why these go well beyond what is typically described as cross-cultural communication in corporate contexts.
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CHCDIV001 Element |
What Learners Must Demonstrate |
Why This Is Advanced Cross-Cultural Practice |
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Element 1: Reflect on one's own perspectives and biases |
Learners examine their own social and cultural assumptions, identify personal biases, and consider how these affect their interactions with diverse people |
Goes beyond awareness into genuine self-reflection and behavioural change, requiring honesty, vulnerability, and professional growth |
|
Element 2: Appreciate diversity and inclusiveness |
Learners use work practices that make environments safe, inclusive, and respectful for people from all backgrounds, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples |
Requires demonstrated workplace behaviour, not theoretical knowledge alone; builds cultural safety as a practice standard |
|
Element 3: Communicate with diverse people |
Learners use verbal and non-verbal communication constructively, deploy strategies to overcome language barriers, and seek assistance from interpreters and bicultural workers where needed |
Codifies practical intercultural communication skills, including active listening, non-verbal literacy, and professional use of language support services |
|
Element 4: Address cross-cultural misunderstandings |
Learners identify issues that may cause misunderstandings, consider the impact of cultural diversity when difficulties arise, and sensitively resolve differences by involving appropriate people |
Essentially codified cross-cultural conflict resolution, requiring emotional intelligence, diplomacy, and professional judgement |
1.2 Foundation Skills and the ACSF: A National Framework for Intercultural Communication
Beyond specific units of competency, cross-cultural communication capability is woven into VET’s broader foundation skills architecture. ASQA’s course accreditation standards define foundation skills as including reading, writing, oral communication, numeracy, learning, problem solving, initiative and self-management, teamwork, and technology skills. The Australian Core Skills Framework identifies language, literacy, and numeracy skills across diverse settings and emphasises that communication inherently involves negotiating meaning in diverse social and cultural contexts, not merely achieving technical correctness in grammar or vocabulary.
Jobs and Skills Australia’s Foundation Skills Study describes foundation skills, including digital capability, as the bedrock of workforce participation, lifelong learning, and social inclusion. This framing inherently encompasses the ability to communicate and participate in culturally diverse workplaces, because Australia’s workplaces are culturally diverse. The study’s emphasis on social inclusion as a foundation skills outcome directly connects to the cross-cultural communication capabilities that VET has been developing through units like CHCDIV001 and through the broader ACSF framework.
Many learner guides for CHCDIV001 explicitly describe the unit as developing cultural competence and interpersonal skills, teaching learners to identify bias, work within their limitations, overcome language barriers, and promote inclusion. These are practical, applied cross-cultural foundation skills embedded in VET pedagogy and assessment. They are not described as emerging because, within VET, they have been standard practice for years. The foundation skills framework provides a national language for describing oral communication, interaction, and intercultural understanding at different levels of performance, giving RTOs the scaffolding to assess these skills systematically rather than on an ad hoc basis.
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The VET Advantage While LinkedIn and corporate learning and development now celebrate cross-cultural communication As an emerging skill, VET has embedded it as a mandatory, assessed competency for decades. CHCDIV001 alone requires learners to demonstrate self-reflection on cultural bias, inclusive workplace practices, constructive intercultural communication, and cross-cultural conflict resolution. This is not awareness training. It is applied to assess professional capability. |
2. Where VET Is Ahead and Where Gaps Remain
Acknowledging that VET has structural strengths in cross-cultural communication does not mean that everything is working as it should. An honest assessment of the sector reveals both genuine advantages and persistent gaps that must be addressed if cross-cultural competence is to translate into equitable outcomes for all learners. The following analysis, structured as a comparison between strengths and gaps, provides a balanced view of where the sector stands in 2026.
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Where VET Is Ahead |
Where Gaps Remain |
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CHCDIV001 and related units are embedded across multiple qualifications in community services, health, education, and customer-facing roles, making cross-cultural communication a mandatory competency, not an optional elective |
Cross-cultural outcomes are strong where CHCDIV001 is delivered, but far less explicit in trades, ICT, business, and other training areas, where CALD learners are equally present and culturally diverse workplaces are the norm |
|
Assessment requirements demand practical application through case studies, workplace observation, and reflective practice on cultural awareness, cultural safety, and resolving cross-cultural misunderstandings |
LLN and digital barriers remain a major obstacle for CALD learners; RTOs could integrate more language-supportive pedagogies and bilingual scaffolding into mainstream VET, not just separate LLN programs |
|
The ACSF and foundation skills policy provide a national language for describing oral communication, intercultural interaction, and understanding at different performance levels, enabling systematic scaffolding |
NCVER data show mismatches between training and occupational outcomes; stronger employer partnerships around inclusive recruitment and workplace communication for CALD graduates would convert competence to employment |
|
VET assessment treats cross-cultural communication as reflective practice, ethical behaviour, and conflict resolution, going far beyond surface-level awareness or politeness training |
Assessment tools may contain cultural bias; RTOs should review instruments for fairness, offer alternative evidence methods (oral vs written), and use interpreters or bicultural support, as CHCDIV001 itself recommends |
2.1 The Unit-to-Whole-of-RTO Gap
The most significant structural gap is the unevenness of cross-cultural communication outcomes across the VET system. Where CHCDIV001 or similar units are delivered, cross-cultural capability is systematically developed and assessed. But in training areas such as trades, ICT, business administration, hospitality, and manufacturing, where CALD learners are equally present and culturally diverse workplaces are the norm, cross-cultural outcomes are far less explicit. A learner completing a Certificate III in Electrotechnology or a Diploma of Information Technology may work in a culturally diverse team from their first day on the job, yet their qualification may contain no unit, assessment task, or explicit learning outcome related to intercultural communication.
This is not a failure of individual RTOs. It reflects the way training packages have been structured: cross-cultural communication has been concentrated in human services and community-facing qualifications, rather than treated as a universal foundation capability across all industries. The qualification-first model emerging through current training package reform offers an opportunity to address this by embedding cross-cultural outcomes at the qualification level across more training packages, rather than relying on a single unit that only appears in selected packages.
2.2 LLN, Digital Barriers, and the CALD Learner Experience
Jobs and Skills Australia’s Foundation Skills Study confirms what practitioners across the VET sector have long observed: adults with lower language, literacy, numeracy, and digital capability, including many learners from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, face a higher risk of poor labour market outcomes. Foundation skills provision is described as central to social inclusion, yet the delivery of LLN support in VET remains uneven, often siloed into separate programs rather than integrated into mainstream training delivery.
For CALD learners, this creates a paradox. VET teaches cross-cultural communication as a competency through units like CHCDIV001, but the system’s capacity to support the very learners who bring lived cross-cultural experience, learners who may be navigating Australian workplace culture for the first time, managing language barriers, and building professional networks in a second or third language, remains inconsistent. Many CALD learners possess extraordinary cross-cultural capability developed through their migration and settlement experiences, but they may lack the English language proficiency, digital literacy, or familiarity with Australian workplace conventions needed to demonstrate that capability through standard VET assessment methods.
The solution is not to lower assessment standards but to diversify how competence can be demonstrated and to provide integrated language and cultural support that enables CALD learners to show what they know and can do. CHCDIV001 itself suggests this: Element 3 explicitly requires learners to seek assistance from interpreters and bicultural workers where needed, modelling the kind of practical, inclusive communication support that RTOs should be embedding across their entire operation, not just within one unit.
2.3 From Competence to Employment: The Outcomes Gap
NCVER’s recent VET Student Outcomes data paint a picture that is encouraging in some respects and concerning in others. Approximately 89.5 per cent of qualification completers reported being satisfied with their training, and 85.1 per cent would recommend their provider. These are strong satisfaction figures that reflect well on the sector. However, the data also show that employment alignment with the field of training is weaker, with only about 28.3 per cent of completers working in the same occupation as their qualification.
For CALD learners, this outcomes gap is particularly significant. A learner who completes a community services qualification with demonstrated cross-cultural competence through CHCDIV001 but who cannot secure employment in their field of training, whether due to language barriers, employer bias, lack of professional networks, or unfamiliarity with Australian recruitment practices, has not received the full benefit of their VET investment. The system has taught them the skill but has not adequately supported the transition from competence to employment.
Stronger partnerships between RTOs and employers around inclusive recruitment, culturally responsive supervision, and workplace communication support for CALD graduates would help close this gap. Some RTOs are already doing this work through structured work placement programs, employer engagement activities, and post-completion support. But it remains the exception rather than the norm, and the sector as a whole has not yet systematically addressed the disconnect between training outcomes and employment outcomes for CALD learners.
3. Assessment Fairness: The Cross-Cultural Dimension RTOs Must Get Right
The Principles of Assessment require that all assessments in VET be fair, flexible, valid, and reliable. The fairness principle is particularly relevant to cross-cultural communication and CALD learner outcomes, because it requires RTOs to consider individual learner circumstances and to provide reasonable adjustments that enable learners to demonstrate competence without being disadvantaged by factors unrelated to the competency being assessed.
In practice, assessment fairness for CALD learners means reviewing assessment tools for cultural bias, whether in the language used, the assumptions embedded in scenarios and case studies, the cultural references in questions, or the expectations about how learners should present their answers. An assessment task that assumes familiarity with Australian cultural norms, colloquial language, or specific institutional contexts may disadvantage a learner who has vocational competence but lacks the cultural-contextual knowledge to decode the assessment requirements.
Assessment flexibility is equally important. CHCDIV001 itself models best practice by requiring learners to demonstrate communication competence through multiple methods, including verbal and non-verbal communication, use of interpreters, and strategies to overcome language barriers. RTOs can extend this principle across their assessment practice by offering alternative evidence methods where appropriate. For some learners, oral demonstration or practical performance may be a more valid way to demonstrate competence than extended written responses, not because the written component should be eliminated, but because the assessment system should capture the learner’s genuine capability rather than measuring their English writing proficiency when the unit being assessed is about workplace performance, not academic writing.
RTOs should also consider the role of bicultural support in assessment. Where learners are assessed in workplaces or simulated environments that involve cross-cultural interaction, the availability of bicultural mentors, interpreters, or cultural liaison staff can make the difference between an assessment that captures genuine competence and one that inadvertently measures cultural adjustment rather than vocational skill. The Standards for RTOs 2025, with their emphasis on learner support and equitable outcomes, reinforce the expectation that RTOs will design assessment systems that work for all learners, not just those from the dominant cultural and linguistic background.
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Assessment Fairness Checklist for CALD Learners 1. Have assessment tools been reviewed for cultural bias in language, scenarios, and assumptions? 2. Are alternative evidence methods available where oral or practical demonstration is more valid? 3. Is interpreter or bicultural support accessible during assessment, where appropriate? 4. Do assessment conditions acknowledge that communication style varies across cultures? 5. Are assessors trained to distinguish between language proficiency and vocational competence? 6. Do validation processes include consideration of fairness outcomes for CALD learner cohorts? 7. Is learner feedback on assessment fairness collected and analysed by cultural background? |
4. The Next Decade Agenda: From Competency to Equity
If the first chapter of cross-cultural communication in VET was about embedding it into competency frameworks, which has largely been achieved through CHCDIV001, the ACSF, and the foundation skills policy, the next chapter must be about converting that embedded capability into equitable outcomes for CALD learners across the entire VET system. This requires action on four fronts.
4.1 Broaden Cross-Cultural Outcomes Beyond Community Services
Cross-cultural communication should not be confined to the CHC Training Package and its associated qualifications. Australia’s workforce is culturally diverse across every industry, and learners in trades, technology, business, hospitality, manufacturing, and primary industries all work in culturally diverse teams and serve culturally diverse clients and customers. The current training package reform process, with its shift toward a qualification-first model and holistic qualification outcomes, offers a generational opportunity to embed cross-cultural capability as a qualification-level outcome across more training packages, rather than treating it as a domain-specific competency relevant only to human services.
This does not necessarily mean adding CHCDIV001 to every qualification. It may mean incorporating cross-cultural performance criteria into existing units, developing cross-industry skill sets focused on intercultural workplace communication, or specifying cross-cultural capability as a foundation skill outcome at the qualification level. The goal is to ensure that every VET graduate, regardless of their industry or qualification, has been assessed on their ability to communicate and work effectively in a culturally diverse Australian workplace.
4.2 Redesign LLN and Learner Support Through an Intercultural Lens
LLN support in VET has historically been structured as a remedial intervention: identify learners who fall below a threshold, provide supplementary support, and aim to bring them up to the level required for their program. For CALD learners, this approach risks framing cultural and linguistic diversity as a deficit to be corrected rather than an asset to be leveraged. Many CALD learners bring multilingual capabilities, cross-cultural lived experience, and the resilience and adaptability that come from navigating life across multiple cultural systems. A more productive approach would be to redesign LLN and learner support through an intercultural lens that recognises and builds on these strengths while addressing specific language, literacy, or digital gaps.
In practical terms, this means integrating language support into mainstream training delivery rather than isolating it in separate programs, using bilingual scaffolding and multilingual resources where they would enhance learning without compromising assessment standards, training all trainers and assessors in culturally responsive pedagogy as part of their professional development, and ensuring that LLN assessment at enrolment captures the full picture of a learner’s capabilities, not just their English language proficiency in isolation. The Standards for RTOs 2025 and their emphasis on learner support, pre-training review, and equitable access to quality training and assessment provide the regulatory foundation for this approach.
4.3 Strengthen Employer Partnerships for Inclusive Employment Outcomes
The gap between cross-cultural competence developed in training and cross-cultural advantage realised in employment cannot be closed by RTOs alone. It requires structured partnerships with employers who understand the value of culturally diverse graduates and who are prepared to invest in inclusive recruitment practices, culturally responsive workplace supervision, and communication support for new employees from CALD backgrounds.
RTOs can play a facilitative role by connecting CALD graduates with employers in their field, providing employers with information about the cross-cultural competencies their graduates have demonstrated, and offering post-completion support that helps graduates navigate the transition from training to employment. Some RTOs are already building these partnerships, particularly in aged care, disability support, and children’s services, where workforce shortages create strong incentives for inclusive recruitment. But the approach should extend across all industries and should be integrated into RTO strategic planning, industry engagement, and quality assurance processes as a measure of training effectiveness.
4.4 Use Data to Track and Improve CALD Learner Outcomes
RTOs cannot improve what they do not measure. The sector needs better, more granular data on CALD learner outcomes, not just completion rates, but employment alignment, employer satisfaction, learner satisfaction disaggregated by cultural background, and long-term career progression. The Standards for RTOs 2025 expect self-assurance and continuous improvement, and this must include specific attention to whether the RTO’s training and assessment systems are producing equitable outcomes for CALD learners.
Quality indicators, validation records, learner feedback, employer feedback, and employment outcome data should all be analysed with a cultural lens. Where patterns of disadvantage emerge, whether in lower completion rates for specific cohorts, weaker employment alignment, lower satisfaction scores, or higher complaint rates, the RTO should investigate the causes and implement targeted improvements. This is not an additional compliance burden. It is the application of the self-assurance mindset that the new regulatory environment demands, applied to one of the most important equity dimensions in Australian VET.
5. Conclusion: From Foundation to Frontier
When LinkedIn identifies cross-cultural communication as one of Australia’s fastest-growing skills, the VET sector should take it as both validation and a challenge. Validation, because VET has been embedding cross-cultural capability into competency frameworks, assessment practice, and foundation skills policy for decades, through units like CHCDIV001 and through the ACSF’s recognition that communication is inherently an intercultural act. The sector is structurally ahead of the corporate world in treating cross-cultural communication not as a soft skill or a workshop topic but as an assessed, mandatory professional competency.
The challenge, however, is that structural embedding has not yet produced uniformly equitable outcomes. Cross-cultural competence is strong where specific units mandate it, but less visible in trades, technology, and business qualifications. CALD learners report high satisfaction with their training but face weaker employment alignment and persistent LLN and digital barriers. The transition from competence to employment remains uneven, with some CALD graduates struggling to convert their demonstrated capabilities into labour market mobility.
The agenda for the next decade is clear. Broaden cross-cultural outcomes beyond community services qualifications. Redesign LLN and learner support through an intercultural lens that recognises diversity as an asset. Strengthen employer partnerships to ensure that cross-cultural competence translates into inclusive employment. And use data to track, analyse, and improve outcomes for CALD learners as a core element of self-assurance and continuous improvement. VET has the framework. It has the competencies. It has the assessment architecture. The work ahead is to close the gap between what VET teaches and what every learner, regardless of their cultural or linguistic background, actually experiences in the Australian workforce.
References and Further Reading
ASQA (2025). Standards for RTOs 2025. https://www.asqa.gov.au/rtos/2025-standards-rtos
ASQA (2025). Standard 10.6: Foundation Skills. https://www.asqa.gov.au/course-accreditation/users-guide-standards-vet-accredited-courses/standards/standard-106-foundation-skills
CHCDIV001 Work with Diverse People. Unit of Competency. https://training.gov.au/training/details/chcdiv001
Department of Employment and Workplace Relations (2025). Australian Core Skills Framework (ACSF). https://www.dewr.gov.au/foundation-skills/australian-core-skills-framework-acsf
Jobs and Skills Australia (2025). Foundation Skills Study: Administrative Data Report. https://www.jobsandskills.gov.au
LinkedIn News Australia (2026). Skills on the Rise 2026: The Fastest-Growing Skills in Australia. LinkedIn.com
NCVER (2024). VET Student Outcomes. Analysis via CAQA: https://caqa.com.au/blogs/news/understanding-ncvers-2024-vet-student-outcomes
