Main.IssueOneMay2008 HistoryHide minor edits - Show changes to markup 18 September 2008, at 04:32 PM
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(:description This first issue of the Tertiary Analysis Newsletter brings you information on new reports on factors associated with higher research quality, 2007 enrolments, monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy and school to tertiary transitions. :) 12 May 2008, at 04:12 PM
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Today the Ministry released a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. to:
Today, the Ministry released a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. 12 May 2008, at 04:11 PM
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The report can be found here: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23752 to:
The report can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23752 12 May 2008, at 04:08 PM
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The report can be found here: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23752 09 May 2008, at 03:53 PM
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Factors associated with higher research qualityToday the Ministry released a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. Deleted lines 48-51:
Factors associated with higher research qualityOn Monday 11 May, the Ministry will release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. 09 May 2008, at 03:52 PM
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2007 EnrolmentsThe Ministry recently released a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. This report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540 2007 enrolment statistics are available now at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/statistics/tertiary_education/participation Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 Advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications – identifying demandOne of the key areas of focus for our monitoring of the strategy is the third priority: Increasing the achievement of advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications to meet regional and national industry needs. In this report – the first of a planned series – David Earle explores a variety of information sources to identify where there is unmet demand for advanced qualifications. David’s report shows that demand for people in the workplace with advanced skills is increasing. Having more people with advanced qualifications is one part of the solution. This report finds that the areas of study where there is high unmet demand for advanced qualifications include information technology, engineering, building and health. The report can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23422 Secondary/tertiary transitions - two new Ministry of Education reports releasedThe Ministry and NZQA have established a programme that aims to build the body of evidence around youth transitions. One of the important moves as part of this project was to link unit record data on participation and achievement from the Ministry, the TEC and NZQA. This project has led to a range of new insights. A new report by Scott Ussher: Post-school choices, how well does academic achievement predict the tertiary education choices of school leavers? examines the association between academic achievement at secondary school and participation in the various types of tertiary education. A second new report by David Scott: How does achievement at school affect achievement in tertiary education? explores the relationship between academic achievement at secondary school and first-year achievement in tertiary education. Both studies model the effect of school achievement under NCEA in relation to a number of other study and demographic related factors, and provide new insights on the degree to which school achievement affects post-school participation and achievement. David shows that the mean first-year course pass rate for the group of NCEA school leavers enrolling in degrees can be determined almost entirely from their NQF achievement. Scott’s report finds that, while academic achievement was a strong predictor of post-school choice, it had a stronger association with participation in bachelors-level study than other post-school choices. These two works complement a recent report by Marian Loader: Students’ transition between school and tertiary education as well as three earlier transitions reports by Scott Ussher. We also expect to put out three shorter factsheets from the transitions project within three weeks. These reports can be found at: Postschool choices: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23103 Achievement at school: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 Students’s transitions: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/20918 Factors associated with higher research qualityOn Monday 11 May, the Ministry will release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. 09 May 2008, at 12:00 PM
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The Ministry recently released on Education Counts a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. This report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. to:
The Ministry recently released a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. This report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. Changed lines 46-47 from:
On Monday 11 May, the Ministry will release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work will be on the Education Counts website. to:
On Monday 11 May, the Ministry will release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. Changed lines 52-55 from:
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Achievment at school: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 to:
Achievement at school: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 09 May 2008, at 11:53 AM
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http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23103 http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/20918 to:
Postschool choices: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23103 Achievment at school: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 Students’s transitions: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/20918 09 May 2008, at 11:51 AM
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Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540#top 2007 enrolment statistics are available now at: to:
Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540 2007 enrolment statistics are available now at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/statistics/tertiary_education/participation Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 Changed lines 17-31 from:
Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12 The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 Advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications – identifying demand to:
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Secondary/tertiary transitions - two new Ministry of Education reports to be out any day to:
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These reports can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23103 http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23110 http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/20918 Factors associated with higher research qualityOn Monday 11 May, the Ministry will release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work will be on the Education Counts website. Deleted lines 45-46:
All of this work is available at http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/home Changed lines 50-61 from:
Factors associated with higher research quality The Ministry is shortly to release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work should be out on Education Counts in about three weeks. Please pass this on to anyone who would be interested but isn’t on the address list. to:
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2007 EnrolmentsThe Ministry recently released on Education Counts a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. This report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540#top 2007 enrolment statistics are available now at: Changed lines 11-14 from:
2007 Enrolments The Ministry recently released on Education Counts a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. this report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. to:
Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12 The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. Changed lines 17-18 from:
There are some associated statistical tables, and we expect to have the full statistics for the 2007 enrolments up on Education Counts in about two weeks. to:
The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 Deleted lines 20-21:
Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540#top Changed lines 23-26 from:
Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12 The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. to:
Advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications – identifying demand One of the key areas of focus for our monitoring of the strategy is the third priority: Increasing the achievement of advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications to meet regional and national industry needs. In this report – the first of a planned series – David Earle explores a variety of information sources to identify where there is unmet demand for advanced qualifications. David’s report shows that demand for people in the workplace with advanced skills is increasing. Having more people with advanced qualifications is one part of the solution. This report finds that the areas of study where there is high unmet demand for advanced qualifications include information technology, engineering, building and health. Changed lines 29-30 from:
The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 to:
The report can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23422 Changed lines 35-38 from:
Advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications – identifying demand One of the key areas of focus for our monitoring of the strategy is the third priority: Increasing the achievement of advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications to meet regional and national industry needs. In this report – the first of a planned series – David Earle explores a variety of information sources to identify where there is unmet demand for advanced qualifications. David’s report shows that demand for people in the workplace with advanced skills is increasing. Having more people with advanced qualifications is one part of the solution. This report finds that the areas of study where there is high unmet demand for advanced qualifications include information technology, engineering, building and health. to:
Secondary/tertiary transitions - two new Ministry of Education reports to be out any day The Ministry and NZQA have established a programme that aims to build the body of evidence around youth transitions. One of the important moves as part of this project was to link unit record data on participation and achievement from the Ministry, the TEC and NZQA. This project has led to a range of new insights. Changed lines 41-42 from:
The report can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23422 to:
A new report by Scott Ussher: Post-school choices, how well does academic achievement predict the tertiary education choices of school leavers? examines the association between academic achievement at secondary school and participation in the various types of tertiary education. Added lines 45-46:
A second new report by David Scott: How does achievement at school affect achievement in tertiary education? explores the relationship between academic achievement at secondary school and first-year achievement in tertiary education. Changed lines 49-52 from:
Secondary/tertiary transitions - two new Ministry of Education reports to be out any day The Ministry and NZQA have established a programme that aims to build the body of evidence around youth transitions. One of the important moves as part of this project was to link unit record data on participation and achievement from the Ministry, the TEC and NZQA. This project has led to a range of new insights. to:
Both studies model the effect of school achievement under NCEA in relation to a number of other study and demographic related factors, and provide new insights on the degree to which school achievement affects post-school participation and achievement. David shows that the mean first-year course pass rate for the group of NCEA school leavers enrolling in degrees can be determined almost entirely from their NQF achievement. Scott’s report finds that, while academic achievement was a strong predictor of post-school choice, it had a stronger association with participation in bachelors-level study than other post-school choices. Changed lines 53-54 from:
A new report by Scott Ussher: Post-school choices, how well does academic achievement predict the tertiary education choices of school leavers? examines the association between academic achievement at secondary school and participation in the various types of tertiary education. to:
These two works complement a recent report by Marian Loader: Students’ transition between school and tertiary education as well as three earlier transitions reports by Scott Ussher. We also expect to put out three shorter factsheets from the transitions project within three weeks. Changed lines 57-58 from:
A second new report by David Scott: How does achievement at school affect achievement in tertiary education? explores the relationship between academic achievement at secondary school and first-year achievement in tertiary education. to:
All of this work is available at http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/home Deleted lines 60-61:
Both studies model the effect of school achievement under NCEA in relation to a number of other study and demographic related factors, and provide new insights on the degree to which school achievement affects post-school participation and achievement. David shows that the mean first-year course pass rate for the group of NCEA school leavers enrolling in degrees can be determined almost entirely from their NQF achievement. Scott’s report finds that, while academic achievement was a strong predictor of post-school choice, it had a stronger association with participation in bachelors-level study than other post-school choices. Changed lines 63-64 from:
These two works complement a recent report by Marian Loader: Students’ transition between school and tertiary education as well as three earlier transitions reports by Scott Ussher. We also expect to put out three shorter factsheets from the transitions project within three weeks. to:
Factors associated with higher research quality The Ministry is shortly to release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work should be out on Education Counts in about three weeks. Deleted lines 68-69:
All of this work is available at http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/home Deleted lines 72-81:
Factors associated with higher research quality The Ministry is shortly to release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work should be out on Education Counts in about three weeks. 09 May 2008, at 11:38 AM
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2007 Enrolments The Ministry recently released on Education Counts a summary of the 2007 tertiary education enrolments – giving information on where students are studying, what qualifications they are taking and details of the changing nature of the student body. this report shows that, while formal tertiary education enrolments fell slightly between 2006 and 2007, more young New Zealanders – those aged 18 to 24 years – studied bachelors degrees and postgraduate certificates and diplomas in 2007. There are some associated statistical tables, and we expect to have the full statistics for the 2007 enrolments up on Education Counts in about two weeks. Check this release out at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/22540#top Monitoring the Tertiary Education Strategy 2007/12 The Ministry recently released a framework for the monitoring of the new Tertiary Education Strategy. This framework – developed with the participation of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and others – will provide the basis for the annual monitoring reports that will attempt to record progress against the goals of the strategy. Monitoring will provide ongoing, timely information to help make sense of the extent to which the intended changes are happening and to what degree. The framework document provides background on what will be monitored and how. The framework can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2563/20337 Advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications – identifying demand One of the key areas of focus for our monitoring of the strategy is the third priority: Increasing the achievement of advanced trade, technical and professional qualifications to meet regional and national industry needs. In this report – the first of a planned series – David Earle explores a variety of information sources to identify where there is unmet demand for advanced qualifications. David’s report shows that demand for people in the workplace with advanced skills is increasing. Having more people with advanced qualifications is one part of the solution. This report finds that the areas of study where there is high unmet demand for advanced qualifications include information technology, engineering, building and health. The report can be found at: http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/23422 Secondary/tertiary transitions - two new Ministry of Education reports to be out any day The Ministry and NZQA have established a programme that aims to build the body of evidence around youth transitions. One of the important moves as part of this project was to link unit record data on participation and achievement from the Ministry, the TEC and NZQA. This project has led to a range of new insights. A new report by Scott Ussher: Post-school choices, how well does academic achievement predict the tertiary education choices of school leavers? examines the association between academic achievement at secondary school and participation in the various types of tertiary education. A second new report by David Scott: How does achievement at school affect achievement in tertiary education? explores the relationship between academic achievement at secondary school and first-year achievement in tertiary education. Both studies model the effect of school achievement under NCEA in relation to a number of other study and demographic related factors, and provide new insights on the degree to which school achievement affects post-school participation and achievement. David shows that the mean first-year course pass rate for the group of NCEA school leavers enrolling in degrees can be determined almost entirely from their NQF achievement. Scott’s report finds that, while academic achievement was a strong predictor of post-school choice, it had a stronger association with participation in bachelors-level study than other post-school choices. These two works complement a recent report by Marian Loader: Students’ transition between school and tertiary education as well as three earlier transitions reports by Scott Ussher. We also expect to put out three shorter factsheets from the transitions project within three weeks. All of this work is available at http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/home Factors associated with higher research quality The Ministry is shortly to release a statistical analysis of the demographic and employment-related factors that are associated with higher research quality in the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) quality evaluation. This report, prepared by Warren Smart, uses the 2006 PBRF quality assessment data to update Warren’s 2005 report that did the same sort of analysis of the 2003 PBRF assessment scores. The report concludes that the quality of research produced by staff is closely aligned with their seniority in the tertiary education sector, with staff of higher academic rank achieving higher research quality. This new work should be out on Education Counts in about three weeks. Please pass this on to anyone who would be interested but isn’t on the address list. |
Tertiary AnalysisProviding updates on recent tertiary education analysis, research and statistics from the Ministry of Education. Recent releases: Newsletters: Subscriptions: Short link for home page: http://bit.ly/TertiaryAnalysis Related links: |