skip navigation to read the content
NCVER
HOME   SITE MAP
About NCVER News & Events Publications Resources Work in Progress Links Search VOCED - international database for VET research
Students and individuals
Teaching and learning
Industry and employers
VET system
VET in context
Statistics
Statistical Standards
Longitudinal Surveys of Australian Youth (LSAY)





       Publication cover

VET in context

Home  > VET system > VET in schools programs > General > Have school vocational education and training programs been successful?

Have school vocational education and training programs been successful?

Summary information

Item:1654
Title:Have school vocational education and training programs been successful?
Authors:Alison Anlezark, Tom Karmel, Koon Ong
Publication date: 28 February 2006
Publication type:Research report
Themes:VET system > VET in schools programs > General
Students and individuals > Learner groups > School students and VET in schools
Students and individuals > Student achievements and outcomes > General
VET in context > Cross-sectoral issues > Schools/VET
ISBN:1 921169 86 9 print; 1 921169 92 3 web

School vocational education and training (VET) programs were introduced to provide more diverse pathways to work and further study for young people. This report investigates whether these programs provide successful outcomes for participants, in terms of retention to Year 12 (or its vocational equivalent) and full-time engagement with employment or learning. The report finds that participation in school VET programs has a small negative impact on retention from Year 10 to Year 12 overall but that there is a positive impact on Year 10 to Year 11 retention. There is a clear positive impact on post-school outcomes for students who participate in school VET programs in Year 11 but do not go on to complete Year 12. Finally, the report looks at whether school VET programs have been successful in establishing post-school VET pathways. The results show that these programs provide a clear pathway for some students, particularly for boys studying in the areas of building and engineering. For most students, however, the pathway is not so direct.

Availability - all content will open in a new window

Key messages

HTML  

Executive summary

HTML  

Full report

PDF version
PDF icon  PDF, 1 MB   Hard copy icon Order hard copy   $34.65

RTF version (2 files)
RTF icon  RTF, 1.3 MB   RTF icon  RTF, 2.8 MB  

Printer-friendly version

To view PDF files
Get Acrobat Reader FREE
 Contact us       Feedback       Accessibility       Data access       Privacy       Conditions of use       Copyright © NCVER    ABN 87 007 967 311