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Home  > Students and individuals > Careers and pathways > General > BR4 Pathways from school to work

BR4 Pathways from school to work

Summary information

Item:1907
Title:BR4 Pathways from school to work
Authors:Phillip McKenzie, Kylie Hillman, Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
Publication date: 1 November 2001
Publication type:Briefing paper
Themes:Students and individuals > Careers and pathways > General
Students and individuals > Learner groups > Young people

This briefing paper looks at the pathways through which Australian youth move from school to work and it highlights that: the school-to-work pathways in Australia are highly diverse and individualised; by the mid-1990s, 43% of Year 10 students from the late 1980s had obtained either a university degree or a TAFE diploma or were studying for one of these qualifications; tertiary qualifications had considerable influence in maintaining full-time employment; the majority of school leavers without tertiary qualifications spend most of their first seven post-school years in full-time work; about 16% of male Year 10 students and 20% of female students had problematic pathways; young people whose main after school activity in the first year was either an apprenticeship, full-time employment or full-time study were more likely to experience successful pathways.

Briefing paper no.4

This report, published by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER), is part of the Longitudinal Surveys of Australian Youth (LSAY) research program.

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Briefing paper

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