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VET in Schools offers alternative paths for students

Posted on:Wednesday, 19th December 2001

Students with low academic results, from English speaking backgrounds, living       in rural areas, attending Government schools and who do not have tertiary       educated parents, are most likely to take up VET in Schools subjects, according       to a study released today by the Australian Council for Educational Research       (ACER).

The term VET in Schools refers to vocational programs that comply with the       National Training Framework and which also form part of a senior secondary       certificate. It includes programs incorporating structured workplace learning       as well as a number of school-based vocational programs.

Vet in schools: participation and pathways, by ACER’s Senior Research       Fellow, Dr Sue Fullarton, analyses the levels of participation in VET in       Schools, the characteristics of the young people who take VET programs, and       their work and study activities after leaving Year 12.

The results are based on data from the Longitudinal Surveys of Australian       Youth (LSAY) research program, which is jointly managed by ACER and the Commonwealth       Department of Education, Science and Training (DEST).

This study follows the experiences of a national cohort of 13 613 students       as they move from school into post-compulsory education, training and work.      It focuses on students who were in Year 9 in 1995 and who completed Year       12 in 1998. It examines their experiences up to 2000 and is the most up-to-date       and detailed information on recent school leavers in Australia.

Dr Fullarton indicated that there is a great variety around Australia both       in the nature and extent of VET programs that are offered to students and       the extent to which students are able to access these programs.

“Nationally, almost one-quarter of the student cohort participated in       some form of VET while at school. Fifteen per cent had undertaken some VET       in Schools subjects at either Year 11 or Year 12, seven percent had completed       subjects in both year 11 and year 12, and more than one per cent had participated       in a school-based new apprenticeship or traineeship,” Dr Fullarton said.

Participation in VET in Schools varies considerably according to early achievement,      socioeconomic status, type of school attended and ethnic background. The       report found that:

Although there is some evidence that VET in Schools is associated with a pathway       either into a recognised form of post-secondary vocational education or training       or work, the unemployment rates were similar for the VET in Schools group       and for the non-VET in Schools group. Also, participation in VET in Schools       appears more likely to be a pathway to the labour force than to further education       and training, more so for males than females.

Dr Fullarton said the results of the study underline the importance of monitoring       participation and outcomes of participation in VET in Schools.

“VET in Schools is still in its infancy. It is also perhaps the most       substantial change that has occurred in post-compulsory study over the last       decade. Offering students a range of options and pathways in their post-compulsory       schooling suited to differing interests and needs of young people encourages       a higher proportion to remain in education and training,” Dr Fullarton       said.

Fullarton, S. (2001). VET in Schools:        Participation and Pathways, LSAY Research       Report 21, Melbourne: ACER.


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