How Educated are Nova Scotians? Education Indicators for the Nova Scotia Genuine Progress Index Prepared by GPI Atlantic February 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Labour market realities for people with developmental disabilities
Advertisements

EU Presidency Conference Effective policies for the development of competencies of youth in Europe Warsaw, November 2011 Improving basic skills in.
Designing Effective Action for Change
1 (c) 2008 The McGraw Hill Companies Redesigning Teacher Salary Structures School Finance: A Policy Perspective, 4e Chapter 12.
The Reasons behind the Results Markku Linna
Chapter 9 Growth.
Race at the Starting Gate: The Social and Economic Integration of the New Second Generation by Monica Boyd.
1 The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants in Germany Key results of the OECD-Report Thomas Liebig Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs.
Higher Education Authority An tÚdarás um Ard-Oideachas HEA 1 The Labour Market and Higher Education in Ireland 13 February 2007.
Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage in Australia Gary Banks Chairman, Productivity Commission OECD WORLD FORUM Statistics, Knowledge and Policy Measuring.
Lisa Dubay, Ph.D., Sc.M. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Center for Children and Families Getting to the Finish Line:
© 2006 POPULATION REFERENCE BUREAU Marlene A. Lee Senior Policy Analyst Domestic Programs 300 MILLION AND COUNTING Education and Workforce: The Critical.
1 The SEP Gradient, Race, or the SEP Gradient and Race: Understanding Disparities in Child Health and Functioning Lisa Dubay, PhD, ScM The Urban Institute.
TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 1.0: Trends in the Overall Health Care Market Chart 1.1: Total National Health Expenditures, 1980 – 2005 Chart 1.2: Percent Change.
Stephen Meek Director of Strategy, DfES 26 April 2006
1 The Academic Profession and the Managerial University: An International Comparative Study from Japan Akira Arimoto Research Institute for Higher Education.
Potential impact of PISA
EU-Regional Policy Structural actions 1 GROWING EVALUATION CAPACITY THE MID TERM EVALUATION IN OBJECTIVE 1 AND 2 REGIONS 8 OCTOBER 2004.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Sophomores: Ready or Not: College Readiness for All
Presenter Name(s) Issue date National Student.
1 Mid-Term Review of The Illinois Commitment Assessment of Achievements, Challenges, and Stakeholder Opinions Illinois Board of Higher Education April.
Overview of National and Maryland Adult Learning Needs Workforce Creation and Adult Education Transition Council July 29, 2008.
Undergraduates in Minnesota: Who are they and how do they finance their education? Tricia Grimes Shefali Mehta Minnesota Office of Higher Education November.
Core Pre-K Standards Review & Comment
1 Career Pathways for All Students PreK-14 2 Compiled by Sue Updegraff Keystone AEA Information from –Iowa Career Pathways –Iowa School-to-Work –Iowa.
Monitoring School District Human Resource Cost Pressures Presented by Tom Gallagher October 30, 2012 Research & Planning Wyoming Department of Workforce.
East Bay Conservation Corps Corpsmember Academy Charter Petition Presentation November 29, 2006.
East Bay Conservation Corps Charter School Charter Renewal Presentation OUSD State Administrator Board of Education September 28, 2005.
B45, Second Half - The Technology of Skill Formation 1 The Economics of the Public Sector – Second Half Topic 9 – Analysis of Human Capital Policies Public.
1 Joint DCSF/DIUS Research Conference 2007 Understanding Diversity: Creating Opportunities 16 November 2007 Thomas Spielhofer.
Supporting Todays Learners Geoff Layer GEES Recruitment and Retention Conference Tuesday 26 June 2007.
14-19 education and skills Diplomas and curriculum change Reforms.
1 The Social Survey ICBS Nurit Dobrin December 2010.
Academic Excellence Indicator System (AEIS) Report Presented to ACISD Board of Trustees 12/17/2009 ARANSAS COUNTY ISD – A TEA RECOGNIZED SCHOOL.
1 The Wealth and Income Position of the Retirement and Pre-Retirement Population René Morissette and Garnett Picot Statistics Canada.
Education, Life Cycle and Mobility: A Latin American Perspective
Education Pays Sandy Baum Independent Higher Education Policy Analyst Senior Fellow, George Washington University School of Education and Human Development.
GENERAL EDUCATION ASSESSMENT Nathan Lindsay January 22-23,
Promoting Regulatory Excellence Self Assessment & Physiotherapy: the Ontario Model Jan Robinson, Registrar & CEO, College of Physiotherapists of Ontario.
Copyright © 2010, SAS Institute Inc. All rights reserved. Making Data Work for Kids: EVAAS Teacher Reports October 2012 SAS ® EVAAS ® for K-12.
January 10, 2007Presented by A. Rounce1 Post-Secondary Education in Saskatchewan Presented to the Citizen Consensus Forum in Regina, SK – Jan. 10, 2007.
Settlement Program Logic Model
Social Change in Western Australia
Higher Education: A Presentation to the Budget Trends Commission May 27, 2008 Mark Misukanis Director of Fiscal Policy and Research Office of Higher Education.
Impact Measurement and Ubora March 2011 Nairobi. Data + Learning + Action = Improvement What is Ubora? Quality Performance PROGRAM PROGRAM SUPPORT IMPACT.
1 Tracking Innovation in NC Patterns and Implications for NC's Eastern Region John Hardin, Executive Director NC Board of Science & Technology
New Patterns of Youth Transition in Education Johanna Wyn Australian Youth Research Centre The University of Melbourne International Youth Researcher meeting.
25 seconds left…...
Who volunteers? Volunteering trends based on government data: A briefing from nfpSynergy February 2011 Telephone: (020)
Ministerie van Sociale Zaken en Werkgelegenheid 1 Strengthening EU Competitiveness – Potential of Migrants on the Labour Market The Costs and Benefits.
Week 1.
Orientation to the Planning 10 IRP  How does Planning 10 fit into the 2004 Graduation Program?  How was Planning 10 developed?  What’s the difference.
Summative Assessment Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT1.
We will resume in: 25 Minutes.
Summer Course, St Sebastian, 5 July 2010 Inna Šteinbuka Director, Social and Information Society Statistics Eurostat.
1 Building human capital and social cohesion through schools Cape Town, South Africa July 2005 Barry McGaw Director for Education Organisation for.
The Aging Population Source: U.S. Census Bureau Percent Growth in U.S. Population, by Age Bracket.
THE SUPPLY, QUALIFICATIONS, AND ATTRITION OF TEACHERS FROM TRADITIONAL AND ALTERNATIVE ROUTES OF PREPARATION Ed Boe and Bob Sunderland University of Pennsylvania.
Virginia Teacher Performance Evaluation System 0 August 2012.
Unpaid care activities among the Indigenous population: Analysis of the 2011 Census Mandy Yap and Dr. Nicholas Biddle This work is funded by the Commonwealth.
What the quarterly Labour Force Survey can tell us about the economic circumstances of people with sight loss Sue Keil RNIB.
York University – 101 Vital Statistics. 2 York University – Facts in Brief  51,819 Students – 46,077 Undergraduates 38,559 full-time 7,518 part-time.
From Research: Measuring what matters To Impact: Making measures matter.
So What Happened to All of Those 20-Something Students Who Didn’t Complete Their Degree Programs? Bruce Chaloux Southern Regional Education Board.
1 Literacy & Numeracy Do They Really Matter? W. Craig Riddell University of British Columbia Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities Toronto, Ontario.
Genuine Progress Index for Atlantic Canada Indice de progrès véritable - Atlantique Education Measures in the Genuine Progress Index NZ Ministry of Education.
1 Perspectives on the Achievements of Irish 15-Year-Olds in the OECD PISA Assessment
Presentation transcript:

How Educated are Nova Scotians? Education Indicators for the Nova Scotia Genuine Progress Index Prepared by GPI Atlantic February 2008

2 Most used measures tell us more about labour market conditions than about educational attainment + send conflicting messages. E.g. Alberta has the lowest high school graduation rate and the second highest drop out rate among provinces (because lucrative jobs are available), but the highest standardized test results (partly because higher performers remain in school). At the same time, Atlantic Canada has the lowest drop out rates, the highest graduation rates, yet scores the lowest on standardized test results.

3 Explaining the Difference 2003 CMEC data: Alberta graduation rate = 10% below Nova Scotia. Difference between Nova Scotia and Alberta PISA scores = just under 10%. According to Dr. Michael Corbett (Acadia Educ.): “By having a more exclusive high school system Alberta adjusts underperforming students out of the school door and into the workforce. As it happens Alberta has an economy that can absorb a considerable amount of educational underachievement. Here in Nova Scotia we don't have that luxury.”

4 Standardized tests -- what do they measure? Also reflect labour market conditions – i.e. who remains in school to be tested Scores often reflect and reinforce socio-economic inequalities Tests focus on a few academic subject areas -- math, science, reading/writing. Are these more important than art, history, or social studies? Standardized testing pressures teachers to “teach to the test,” at expense of other non-test subjects Standardized test results can be misused and manipulated to support calls for questionable reform

Average scores in the PISA math assessment by quartile of family socioeconomic status, 15-year-olds, Canada and provinces, 2003

6 What these quantitative “output” measures don’t tell us – esp. “outcomes”: How educated the populace is, and whether we are getting wiser and more knowledgeable Whether we’re learning what we need to know to live well and sustainably, & improve our wellbeing What and how we learn from non-school sources (media, family, community etc.) Anything about the quality of education, and the quality of information in the learning environment…. Etc.

7 So What is an “Educated Populace”? An “Educated Populace” has the knowledge and skills required to foster wellbeing in individuals and in the population as a whole —that is to live full and healthy lives, have decent jobs, participate actively in their communities as citizens, and understand the interdependence of the world in which they live, without imperiling these prospects for future generations.

8 Framework for indicators of an educated populace POPULACE Wisdom and Values CONTEXT (determinants) LEARNING OUTCOMES ECOLOGICAL INTEGRITY & SUSTAINABILITY (UNDESD) SOCIAL OUTCOMES ( GPI Domains) Population Health Time Use Living Standards Human Impact on the Environment Social Capital Natural Capital To live together To do To be To know

9 YET…Literacy flat, despite more schooling “More analytical work is required to explore the factors around the lack of overall change in the literacy performance of Canadians.” (Statistics Canada) “We urgently need to understand why our current literacy and learning programs are not succeeding in order to develop more effective approaches.” (Canadian Council on Learning)

Average prose literacy scores across selected regions and provinces, Canadian population aged 16 and over, 1994 and 2003

Average document literacy scores across selected regions and provinces, Canadian population aged 16 and over, 1994 and 2003

12 Percentile scores of correct answers to general political knowledge questions, by age group, 1984, 1993, 1997, and 2000

Ecological Literacy? Footprint by Educational Attainment, Canada, 2005 (1st time)

Average debt from government student loans at graduation, by province, classes of 1995 and 2000 ($2000)

15 Average amount borrowed (all sources) for the 2003 degree, post-2003 degree education or both, by Maritime province of graduation, 2005 ($2005)

16 Average undergraduate university tuition fees, Canada and provinces, 1990/1991, 2005/2006, 2007/2008 (in 2005 constant dollars)

17 Employment rate of full-time students, 20–24 years of age, Canada, 1976–2006

18 Average work hours per week during the school year for full-time students, aged 18–24 years, Canada, 1976–2006

19 Average work hours per week during the school year for full-time students, aged 18–24 years, provinces, 1976, 1986, 1996, 2006

20 Incidence of advertising in Canada’s public elementary and secondary schools, by percentage, 2003/2004

21 Public versus private share of sponsored research at Canadian universities, 1972–2005

22 Where to from Here? What’s Next? Key Messages: 1.We have not answered the question: How educated are Nova Scotians? 2.Conventional output indicators can’t do so 3.Development of new indicators, data sources, measurement methods is needed – a ‘paradigm shift’ (NS Education Dept.) 4.See Report Appendix: Comprehensive list of “ideal” indicators (yet this summary necessary for 2008 completion of NS GPI)

23 The Good News 3 years GPI research uncovered good models, measures of arts literacy, media literacy, health literacy, food and nutrition literacy, civic literacy, multicultural literacy, Indigenous knowledge literacy, statistics literacy, ecological literacy, and science literacy. + Wisdom scales, informal and non-formal learning, ETC. – Available in other places, not yet Canada

Recommendation: Create required data -> Canadian Knowledge Survey (11+ literacies) (or Maritime KS? - MPHEC - available to NS Ed) Good education indicators = glue, binding factor, connective tissue between all GPI components – link learning outcomes to social outcomes – e.g. health, civic, ecological literacy, etc. 24