For decades, the prevailing approach to supporting students with disabilities in Australian vocational education and training has been shaped by the medical model of disability. Under this model, the focus falls squarely on diagnosis. A student presents documentation from a health professional, the registered training organisation (RTO) records a disability type, and adjustments are applied based largely on what the diagnosis is understood to mean. It is a framework built on categorisation and clinical evidence, and it has been the default operating mode for most RTOs across the country.
The recent release of comprehensive guidance materials by the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations (DEWR), developed through the Supporting Students with Disability in VET project, signals a decisive shift away from this approach. These materials are aligned with the social model of disability and with Australia's Disability Strategy, calling on RTOs to move towards a needs-based approach that centres on what support a student requires to participate and succeed, rather than on what diagnosis they carry.
The Problem with the Medical Model
The medical model of disability locates the problem within the individual. A student has a condition, and that condition creates limitations. The RTO's role is essentially reactive: wait for a student to disclose a diagnosed disability, request evidence, and then determine what adjustments might be appropriate. On the surface, this seems reasonable. In practice, however, the medical model creates barriers that actively undermine the support it is designed to provide.
The first and most significant barrier is disclosure. Many students with disabilities are reluctant to declare their condition during enrolment or at any point in their training journey. Some students have had negative experiences in previous educational settings and do not want to be labelled. Others come from cultural backgrounds where disability is understood differently, and they may not identify with the term at all. For some students, the medicalised language used on enrolment forms is itself a deterrent, carrying connotations of deficit and limitation.
The second barrier is the requirement for medical documentation. Obtaining a formal diagnosis or updated clinical report can be expensive, time-consuming, and in some regional and remote areas, simply not accessible. The DEWR materials make the important observation that procurement of medical documentation can be difficult, can be expensive, and is not necessarily productive in terms of RTOs being able to arrange support. A diagnosis of an acquired brain injury, a learning disability, or a physical condition tells an RTO what a student has been clinically assessed as having. It does not tell the RTO what the student needs in order to succeed in a particular course.
The third barrier is perhaps the most counterintuitive: medical evidence, even when obtained, often does not provide the information an RTO actually needs. Health professionals can make clinical assessments and diagnoses, but as the DEWR guidance notes state, their skill set may not extend to identifying the impact of a person's disability on their learning or what appropriate reasonable adjustments might be needed in a learning context. The person best placed to describe how a disability affects their learning is, in most cases, the student themselves.
The Social Model: A Different Starting Point
The social model of disability takes a fundamentally different starting point. Rather than locating the problem in the individual, it recognises that the environment, the systems, the attitudes, and the structures within which a person operates can themselves be disabling. A student who uses a wheelchair is not disabled by their mobility impairment; they are disabled by a training facility that lacks accessible infrastructure. A student with dyslexia is not disabled by their reading difficulties; they are disabled by assessment methods that rely exclusively on written responses.
This reframing has profound implications for how RTOs think about and respond to disability. Under the social model, the first question is not what is wrong with this student, but what barriers exist in our training environment, and how can we remove or reduce them. It shifts the onus from the student to the organisation, moves the conversation from diagnosis to support needs, and replaces a focus on individual deficit with one on systemic design.
The DEWR materials make this explicit. They advise RTOs to encourage students to share their support needs rather than relying on a medical declaration and evidence of disability. This is not merely a philosophical position. It is a practical directive that changes how RTOs design their forms, conduct their enrolment processes, train their staff, and interact with students at every stage of the training journey.
Imputed Disability: Supporting Students Without a Diagnosis
One of the most important concepts introduced in the DEWR guidance materials is imputed disability. This is a term that originates in the schooling sector and refers to an undiagnosed disability that an institutional team considers a student to have, based on the functional impact it is having on their learning. Under the Nationally Consistent Collection of Data on School Students with Disability (NCCD), schools routinely support students on the basis of imputed disability, providing adjustments and resources without requiring a formal clinical diagnosis.
This concept has significant implications for RTOs. As cohorts of students who have been supported in school using concepts of imputed disability transition into VET, they arrive with an expectation of support but often without formal documentation. The student may have received years of targeted assistance from an education support officer, but the evidence base for that support may rest on teacher observations rather than on a medical report.
The DEWR guidance makes clear that people who are deemed to have a disability are protected under the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (DDA) and the Disability Standards for Education 2005 (DSE). An RTO cannot refuse to provide support simply because a student lacks a formal diagnosis. If there is a reasonable basis for believing that a student has a disability affecting their learning, the RTO has an obligation to respond.
This is a significant shift for many RTOs, particularly those that have built their disability support processes around a documentation-first approach. The DEWR materials encourage RTOs to consider what the student has told them and to develop a learning support plan based on that information, working collaboratively with the student to identify strategies that address the functional impact of the disability. The emphasis is on what helps this student learn, not on what label has been applied to their condition.
Encouraging Disclosure Through Needs-Based Language
If the medical model discourages disclosure through its reliance on clinical terminology and documentation, the needs-based approach seeks to encourage it through positive, supportive, and non-medicalised language. The DEWR materials provide detailed recommendations on how RTOs can redesign their forms, processes, and communication to create an environment in which students feel safe sharing their support needs.
At the most practical level, this means rethinking the language used on enrolment forms. Rather than asking students to declare a disability from a predetermined list of clinical categories, the materials recommend forms that focus on needs-based language, inviting students to describe the support they might find helpful. A question such as "What could we do to support your learning?" is very different in tone and effect from a question that asks a student to select from a list of medical diagnoses. The former is success-oriented and forward-looking. The latter is clinical and potentially stigmatising.
The DEWR materials also emphasise that disclosure should not be treated as a single event that occurs at enrolment. Disclosure may happen at any point during the student journey, and RTOs should create multiple opportunities and pathways for students to share their needs. Forms and processes should make clear that the enrolment stage is not the last chance for support needs to be identified. Supporting disclosure is best achieved through non-personal information-gathering instruments, such as carefully designed forms, rather than through course counselling sessions where a student may feel put on the spot. Follow-up conversations about specific adjustments can then be conducted separately, in a more private and supportive setting.
Respecting Student Autonomy and Lived Experience
A central principle of the needs-based approach is respect for the autonomy of the student. The DEWR materials make clear that students with disabilities are not obligated to disclose their specific disability unless they wish to request reasonable adjustments, or their disability is likely to pose a risk to themselves or others. Students own their medical and personal information, and RTOs must respect that ownership.
Many VET students have already developed effective strategies for managing the impact of their disability on their learning. They have succeeded in school, in workplaces, and in life, and they bring knowledge about what works for them. The DEWR materials encourage RTOs to co-design reasonable adjustments with the student, rather than imposing a standard set of accommodations based on a diagnostic category. This collaborative approach saves the RTO time and guesswork, and produces better outcomes because the adjustments are tailored to the individual.
What This Looks Like in Practice
The DEWR guidance materials include practice illustrations that show how the needs-based approach works in real-world VET settings. These scenarios demonstrate the practical difference between the medical model and the social model in action.
In one illustration, a student enrolling in an Electrotechnology course ticks the disability box on their enrolment form but has no formal diagnosis or clinical documentation. When the RTO follows up, the student explains that they always struggled at school, particularly with reading, writing, and mathematics, and that an education support officer often helped them. Under a medical-model approach, many RTOs would ask for documentation, and in its absence, the conversation might stall. Under the needs-based approach, the RTO instead focuses on the student's lived experience: what challenges did they face, what strategies helped them, and what support might they need in their new course. The RTO discusses the training requirements, identifies the literacy and numeracy demands, and works with the student to build a plan based on what actually helps.
In another illustration, a student with an acquired brain injury fills in an online enrolment form that allows her to declare her condition but does not ask about its impact on her learning. She also has a related visual impairment, which she considers her primary disability, but the form provides no way to describe this. No one follows up, and her trainer is later surprised when she has difficulty with in-class activities. The DEWR materials identify what the RTO could have done differently: design forms that ask about functional impact and support needs rather than simply listing disability categories, ensure that listings are not presented as exhaustive, and provide a means of confidential enquiry.
These scenarios illustrate a recurring theme: the medical model not only fails to capture the full picture of a student's needs, but it can also actively prevent RTOs from obtaining the information they need to provide effective support.
The Strengths-Based Approach: Focusing on What Students Can Do
Closely related to the shift from medical to social models is the adoption of a strengths-based approach, which the DEWR materials advocate throughout the toolkit. A strengths-based approach focuses on what the student is able to do and contribute, rather than on what they are unable to do because of their disability. It recognises students' capabilities and understands that everyone needs support in some way.
This approach has three key components as outlined in the DEWR guidance. The first is supporting a success-focused approach, which involves talking to students about what helped them succeed in previous study or work. The second is providing an emphasis on completion, co-creating individual learning plans that focus on achievable goals and celebrate incremental progress. The third is maintaining a positive orientation throughout the student's engagement with the RTO, ensuring that every interaction is framed around possibility and capability rather than limitation.
For trainers and assessors, this represents both a mindset shift and a practical change. It means moving from a deficit-based conversation that catalogues what a student cannot do, to a capabilities-based conversation that identifies what they can do and how the training environment can build on those strengths.
Implications for RTO Systems and Processes
Adopting a needs-based approach requires a systematic review of the policies, processes, and culture that shape how an RTO interacts with students with disabilities. It is not simply a matter of changing the language on an enrolment form, although that is an important starting point. The DEWR materials identify several practical areas where changes are needed. Forms and documentation should focus on support needs rather than medical diagnoses, unless national reporting requirements specifically require the latter. Staff training should equip all frontline personnel with the skills and confidence to respond supportively when a student discloses a disability. Information management systems should ensure that support needs are communicated to relevant staff confidentially, so that students do not have to repeat their story to every new person they encounter. Monitoring and review processes should be built into student support plans to ensure adjustments are working and can be modified as the student progresses.
The DEWR materials also provide practical tools to support this transition, including the RTO Self-Check and the Trainer and Assessor Self-Check, which enable organisations and individuals to assess where they currently sit on the spectrum from medical-model to needs-based practice. The blank templates for student support plans, consultation records, and reasonable adjustments documentation are all designed with a needs-based approach in mind.
Alignment with the Standards for RTOs 2025
The shift from a medical model to a needs-based approach is increasingly a regulatory expectation. The Standards for RTOs 2025 place a strong emphasis on student outcomes, wellbeing, and the promotion of diversity. Outcome Standard 2.5 requires that the learning environment promotes and supports diversity, while Outcome Standard 2.6 requires that well-being needs are identified and strategies put in place. Meeting these standards requires evidence that the RTO is actively responding to student needs. A needs-based approach provides a practical pathway to achieving this, generating documentation that demonstrates genuine engagement with student needs and continuous improvement.
The move from a medical model to a needs-based approach represents one of the most significant shifts in how RTOs support students with disabilities. For too long, the VET sector has relied on a framework that places the burden of disclosure, documentation, and proof on the very students who most need support. The DEWR guidance materials provide a comprehensive, practical, and evidence-informed alternative.
The message is clear: RTOs should be asking what support a student needs, not what diagnosis they carry. They should be designing systems that anticipate diversity and remove barriers, not systems that wait for students to produce clinical evidence. They should be listening to students, respecting their autonomy, and co-designing adjustments that draw on the students' own knowledge and experience.
The medical model, while well-intentioned, too often leaves students unsupported or engaged in an exhausting cycle of proving their need for help. The needs-based approach opens the door to genuine partnership between RTOs and their students, a partnership that leads to better outcomes for everyone. The DEWR guidance materials make that partnership not only possible but practical. Every RTO in Australia should be engaging with them now.
