Artificial intelligence (AI) has quickly shifted from an emerging trend to a practical tool shaping how training organisations around the world create, deliver, and evaluate learning. A recent study by the Association for Talent Development (ATD) found that nearly two-thirds of instructional designers only began using AI in the past year—and most are already reporting improvements in both efficiency and course quality. For Australian RTOs navigating the transition to the Outcome Standards for RTOs 2025, this presents both opportunities and risks that cannot be ignored.
Why AI Matters for RTOs
AI is particularly effective at supporting the design of training and assessment. It can:
- Generate first drafts of course outlines, storyboards, and learning objectives.
- Assist in creating varied assessment items and case studies.
- Produce voice-overs and micro-learning content that support online and blended delivery.
- Summarise complex information into learner-friendly formats.
These functions reduce the manual workload of trainers and instructional designers, freeing them to focus on higher-value tasks—such as contextualising materials to industry needs, maintaining compliance with training package requirements, and enhancing the learner experience.
In other words, AI has the potential to become the “junior assistant” every RTO team has been wishing for.
The Compliance Lens
However, efficiency gains alone are not enough. AI-generated content must still meet the rigorous requirements of the Standards for RTOs and be subject to human oversight. Three areas deserve special attention:
- Accuracy and Contextualisation. AI outputs must be validated against the unit of competency, assessment conditions, and industry expectations. Without this, RTOs risk non-compliance under Clauses 1.8 and 1.9.
- Intellectual Property and Copyright. Globally, 96% of instructional designers report concern about copyright and ownership of AI-generated materials. RTOs need clear policies to determine whether AI-created resources are “fit for use” and owned by the organisation.
- Data Confidentiality. Feeding student or organisational data into public AI tools poses risks. Governance arrangements must align with compliance standards and protect student privacy.
Strategic Applications for Australian RTOs
Forward-thinking RTOs can use AI to:
- Accelerate TAS development while maintaining compliance through robust human review.
- Support trainers and assessors with AI-generated lesson plans, examples, and practice activities.
- Enhance learner support with on-demand explanations, revision quizzes, and feedback tools.
- Strengthen internal audits by using AI to scan trainer matrices, assessment tools, or TAS documents for gaps before ASQA visits.
When implemented with proper oversight, AI can strengthen both compliance outcomes and student success.
Building AI Capability in RTOs
The transition to the Outcome Standards 2025 demands not just compliance, but continuous improvement. AI adoption should therefore be accompanied by:
- A clear AI in Training and Assessment Policy covering ethical use, validation processes, and governance.
- Professional development for staff on AI literacy, prompting, and validation skills.
- Embedding AI-related risks and controls into the Quality Management System (QMS) and internal audit cycle.
By positioning AI as a collaborative partner—not a replacement for human expertise—RTOs can enhance both efficiency and quality while meeting ASQA’s expectations for integrity and learner protection.
For RTO leaders, the question is no longer whether AI will shape the sector, but how it will be applied responsibly. Used well, AI can become a catalyst for compliance excellence and learner-centred design. Used carelessly, it risks undermining the very standards RTOs are required to uphold.
At Insources, we see AI as a tool that, when coupled with governance and professional judgement, can help RTOs deliver on their promise: high-quality, industry-relevant, and compliant training.


