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Project no: nr1026a
Publication title: School students' views on their working
and learning in the workplace
This supplementary report discusses additional analysis of data gathered
during the study reported in School
students learning from their paid and unpaid work. The study was
designed to find the extent and learning outcomes of school students
engagement with workplaces, focusing primarily on work experience, paid
part-time work and structured work placements (referred to in the report
as vocational placements).
Research was carried out in two States, South Australia and New South
Wales, through three major methods: a questionnaire administered in thirteen
schools to students in Years 10, 11 and 12; six school and locality-based
case studies including employer interviews and focus groups; and interviews
with key national figures in the area. Of the 1451 students who responded
to the questionnaire, 68% had undertaken work experience, 60% had formal
paid jobs, and 11% had done vocational placements. When Year 11 and 12
responses only were considered, 88% had done work experience and 18% had
undertaken vocational placements.
This study analysed additional qualitative material from the report School
students learning from their paid and unpaid work. Valuable remarks
by students about their workplace experiences had been offered in response
to a number of open-ended questions, but were not able to be analysed
for the original report. In addition a small amount of extra quantitative
analysis was carried out. It is recommended that this report be read in
conjunction with the original report, which contains the major quantitative
results and information on representativeness of the sample. Government
schools were under-represented in the questionnaire responses, which may
have led to an under-reporting of overall workplace engagement, except
in family businesses, in which non-government students were shown to be
more likely to be involved.
Because of the comparatively low percentage of students involved in placements
compared with work experience and paid work, some of the analysis could
not include placement students as numbers of responses to some questions
were too low. Moreover, the placement students did not appear to be distributed
across industry areas in accordance with nationallyknown data on placements,
and so may not have been altogether typical.
Type of activities
The students surveyed undertook a wide range of activities
in all of their workplace engagement, with communication-related activities,
dealing with customers, and food preparation being the most common in
both work experience and paid work. Paid work was more likely to involve
operating equipment than work experience. The range of activities was
wide in all types of workplace engagement, from cleaning out animal enclosures
in a zoo to dyeing hair and servicing cars.
Enjoyment of work
Although most students enjoyed their workplace engagement
at least a little, paid work had slightly higher rates of non-enjoyment
(10%) than work experience and placements (6% each). Those who were engaged
in all types of activity were most likely to enjoy their paid jobs. Those
who had only done work experience were most likely to make negative comments
about work experience.
Of those who volunteered extra comments about their workplace engagement
(fewer than half in each case), a number of negative and positive comments
were made. For both paid work and placements, negative comments outweighed
positive comments. Some of the negative comments from paid student-workers
were very strongly worded and these types of comments may help account
for the perception noted in the original report among education department
officials that part-time work undertaken by school students is unrewarding.
The negative comments made by some of the placement students seemed to
indicate that these particular placement students were being treated like
work-experience students.
What the students learned
Analysis of the qualitative comments indicated that
generic skills were mentioned more often in relation to paid work, while
technical skills were mentioned more often about work experience. In all
types of engagement, both positive and negative learning experiences were
mentioned. Many students, for example, on work experience found that their
preferred career was not what they had expected. Others, however, learned
a great deal. A small percentage of paid student-workers commented that
their bad experiences at work had made them decide to stay at school for
longer.
Transfer of learning among school and work places
Students did not report a great deal of transfer of learning from school
to work experience. The most commonly mentioned transfer related to written
communication, with a small percentage reporting specific preparation
for work experience. There was slightly less reported transfer from work
experience back to school, with around a third of those choosing to make
comment mentioning generic skills.
Fewer students reported transfer of learning from school to paid work
than from school to work experience, and these more often mentioned specific
skills such as using a computer, using a cash register and woodwork. Written
communication was less often mentioned. Transfer back the other way, from
work to school, was more likely to be linked to good manners and less
likely to be linked to career path choices, than for work experience.
Most students who undertook placements found good transfer of learning
from their VET course to their placements; however there was less transfer
of learning back from the placement into the VET course.
Students who had done both paid work and work experience reported some
transfer of learning between the two types of engagement. Customer service
skills featured particularly heavily in the transfer from paid work to
work experience, but was less emphasised in the other direction.
Comparing learning from different types of workplace experiences
An earlier and more quantitive report* on this
same survey showed that nearly two-thirds of those who had done both paid
work and work experience thought they learned most from paid work. Additional
analysis showed that students from self-reported lower socioeconomic backgrounds
were more likely to learn more from paid jobs than work experience. The
same held true for those with lower academic achievement.
For those who learned more from paid work, the following reasons (apart
from the fact that they got paid) were most commonly given:
- more hands on
- more responsibility
- enjoyed it more.
Despite paid work being reported as a site of more learning than work
experience, 68% of students who had done both said they still found work
experience useful. Reasons most commonly given were:
- insight into a different area of work
- helped choose career path
- work experience and paid job were linked.
These findings strongly confirmed the finding from the original report*
that the special value of work experience is in exploring careers and
different types of workplaces rather than as a general introduction to
working life. The comments about paid work underline the value of authentic
engagement in a workplace as a full member of the paid workforce, It seems
therefore that both types of activity are valuable and neither can substitute
fully for the other.
* E Smith &
A Green 2001, School students learning
from their paid and unpaid work, NCVER, Adelaide
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