Last week I posted re the need to significantly improve education for Maori young people: https://www.kiwiblog.co.nz/2025/02/more_detail_on_the_need_for_huge_improvement_in_our_education_for_maori_children_and_youth.html
Citing one problem situation does not exclude others so I promised to do a brief look at some education stats from the perspective of Socio-Economics.
Up until a couple of years ago schools had a decile ranking (10 high, 1 low) based primarily on the average income in an address area. Schools now receive a Equity Index Number based on 37 socio-economic “risk-factors”. It is inverse to decile numbers so a high EQI means more students with significant risk factors – a low EQI means few. Each school gets an individual number and an amount of marginal funding is dependant on that.
So …
Attendance:
In Term 3 of 2024 (we have to wait until March 20 before we know about T4 2024)
So …
Attendance:
In Term 3 of 2024 (we have to wait until March 20 before we know about T4 2024)
- Overall full attendance was 51.3%
- In schools where there was fewest at risk-students full-attendance was 61.2%
- In schools with the most at risk students full-attendance was 35%.
Using University Entrance for Leavers as the highest common indicator of achievement (and one that includes Cambridge Schools) and breaking the EQIs into 10ths to match the old deciles.
In 2023
- The schools in the lowest EQI 10th had 70% of their students leave with UE (on average)
- The schools in the second lowest EQI = 67%
- The schools in the third lowest EQI = 52%The schools in the 3rd highest EQI 10th had 20% of their students leave with UE (on average)
- The schools in the 2nd highest EQI = 18%
- The schools in the 3rd highest EQI = 8%
“We shape an education system that delivers equitable and excellent outcomes.”
For further reading this brilliant article by Kirsty Johnson in 2018 is insightful.
e.g. “One university took only a single decile one entrant – out of more than 2000 – into its engineering programme in five years. At the same time, it took more than 500 decile 10 students.”
And this recent article on the intake at Otago Medical School.
e.g. “Students from schools in the lowest socio-economic quintile were nearly absent from health professional programme admissions, comprising approximately 2% of students entering those programmes across time,” wrote the authors in the study, released in November.”
Alwyn Poole, a well-known figure in the New Zealand education system, he founded and was the head of Mt Hobson Middle School in Auckland for 18 years. This article was published HERE
2 comments:
This is interesting as I was watching some of the speakers from the ARC conference in the UK. And one speaker highlighted in the USA that people who went to better schools had advanced reading ages early on; did better at school; went onto higher education; had higher incomes and a great life expectancy of about 9 years !. That’s about the same difference between most New Zealanders and Maori. Perhaps the solution for our treaty ‘partners’ is to send your kids to school; every single day.
All we are dealing with here are tautologies - saying the same thing in different ways.
Low-SES parents do not value education as much as high-SES (whatever the cliches they may parrot) parents and do not set high expectations for their offspring. The offspring tend to follow in their parents' footsteps with regard to literacy, general education, career-specific education, etc. So you wouldn't expect many labourers' sons and daughters to be attending medical school.
The difference today is that while low-SES people could get jobs and earn enough to get by 50 years ago, now they can't. This is blamed on the education system by many but that is nonsense as education does not create vacancies in the labour market, certainly not for low-skilled workers.
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