National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education Funded by the Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
C4EO Support for Regional Developments Gill Taylor Regional Associate 1.
Advertisements

Measuring health outcomes of engagement in the arts: the Arts Health Strategy for the Australia Council.
Intervention Research and Strategy Options
LEARNING & SKILLS COUNCIL – CONTEXT AND PRIORITIES 6 December 2007 Presented to South London Learning Partnership Main Board Meeting By Vic Grimes, Area.
CREATING OUR FUTURE Building Towns and Cities as Learning Communities Edmonton, CANADA 3-4 June, 2004 ADELAIDE Where we were, Where we are now ADELAIDE.
Forum Presentatio n. Purpose Tailored to the Catholic schooling needs and circumstance. Promote excellence in teaching and allow schooling authorities.
Nuffield Foundation: funding science education Angela Hall Director, Science and Mathematics Education.
1 Building the Scaffolding: middle years survey results Services for the middle years: 8-12 years Of the 206 respondents: o 59 per cent provided services.
CEET Conference 2011 Funding VET for Social Inclusion Competitive tendering and contestable funding in VET: approaches to supporting access and equity.
Together We ARE Better: Higher Education-State Agency Partnerships That Support Quality Camille Catlett FPG Child Development Institute University of North.
Infant Mental Health – understanding of attachment in practice Julie Watson – Scottish Institute of Human Relations
Public engagement and lifelong learning: old wine in a new bottle, or a blended malt? Paul Manners Director, National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women’s Fund Incorporated ATSI Women’s Initiatives For the advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women.
Co-production approaches to reducing health inequalities Catriona Ness NHS Tayside.
Griffith Youth Forensic Service From treatment to prevention : Working with Queensland remote Indigenous communities Sue Rayment-McHugh Manager Griffith.
Federal Budget Measure Drug and Alcohol and Mental Health Counselling Services within Universities.
Penny Worland, Senior Policy Planner District Council of Mount Barker Feb 2015.
‘It’s refined my understanding of foundation concepts’ ‘Other students ‘get’ how it feels ’ ‘It’s broadened my employment opportunities’ Abstract: Students.
Background Many of the current global crises are directly linked to the urban development path Many sustainable development issues cannot be resolved.
Teaching Pathways Team Quality Teaching Branch
Funding Models for the Future Colin Walters Higher Education Group Department of Education, Science and Training Department of Education, Science and Training.
Aiming High: Secondary Education in South Australia Chris Robinson Chief Executive Department of Education and Children’s Services South.
Department of Planning and Community Development Corporate Plan: Government priorities we contribute to Building friendly, confident and safe.
NSW Interagency Guidelines for Child Protection Intervention 2006 Briefing Information Session Child Protection Senior Officers Group.
SEN 0 – 25 Years Pat Foster.
Review of Aboriginal Education. Background to the Review Background to the Review Terms of Reference Terms of Reference Data collection process Data collection.
ACJRD 16 th Annual Conference 4 th October  2007: Prevention and Early Intervention Programme, funded by DYCA and The Atlantic Philanthropies;
Closing the Indigenous health gap & evaluation: getting it right and making an impact Professor Ian Anderson.
Transforming lives through learning Profiling Education Scotland.
Needs Assessment: Young People’s Drug and Alcohol Services in Edinburgh City EADP Children, Young People and Families Network Event 7 th March 2012 Joanne.
Lin Martin Vice-President, Deakin University. Low SES, regional and remote and Indigenous students TAFE will not help improve higher education equity.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Higher Education Advisory Council Indigenous Leaders Forum Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Higher Education.
Early Help Strategy Achieving better outcomes for children, young people and families, by developing family resilience and intervening early when help.
Where the Jobs Are: developing competency in the use of labour market information Carole Brown Past President, Career Development Association of Australia.
Introducing the Aboriginal Education and Training Policy NSW Department of Education & Training Aboriginal Education and Training Policy
CHILDREN, YOUTH AND WOMEN’S HEALTH SERVICE New Executive Leadership Team 15 December 2004 Ms Heather Gray Chief Executive.
It is;  A 2 year programme, DCSF funded, hosted by L.G.A., supported by IDeA.  Focussing on ‘3-13’ population.  Having 5 themes (key lines of enquiry).
A focus on student outcomes Key influences on enhancing student outcomes System wide lasting and deep change Knowledge and understanding Capacity and.
New arrangements for careers guidance 1 Dr Sharon Goddard, Transition Advisor 27 June 2011.
NSW Department of Education & Training Aboriginal Education and Training Policy ACE SOCIAL INCLUSION FORUM Sebel Sydney 26 February.
Trade Union Training on Youth Employment for Leaders of Youth Committees in Asia and the Pacific region Bangkok May 13, 2004 Sara Spant Associate Expert.
The Improving Teacher Quality State Grants Program California Postsecondary Education Commission California Mathematics & Science Partnership 2011 Spring.
FLAGSHIP STRATEGY 1 STUDENT LEARNING. Student Learning: A New Approach Victorian Essential Learning Standards Curriculum Planning Guidelines Principles.
Community Engagement. What is Community Engagement?  Community engagement refers to the process by which community benefit organisations and individuals.
Towards a health and wellbeing service framework a discussion paper for consultation.
Ready to Raise PowerPoint Resource The Work of Early Years Community Developers Please feel free to adapt these PowerPoint slides to your needs. Credit.
Transforming Patient Experience: The essential guide
Will the Bradley recommendations improve equity?
The implications of poverty for educational effectiveness in all schools School Effectiveness & Socio-economic Disadvantage.
1 The Buddy Program: An initiative from the Office of the Dean of Students in the Division of Education, Arts & Social Sciences.
Groups experiencing inequities
Advancing learning through service Tamara Thorpe Trainer | Coach | Consultant Region 2 NAFSA Albuquerque, NM.
Co-Production in Tayside Paul Ballard Deputy Director of Public Health NHS Tayside Honorary Senior Lecturer Dundee University Medical School.
Curtin University is a trademark of Curtin University of Technology CRICOS Provider Code 00301J Research and Practice in Australia Professor Sue Trinidad,
How AFC supports mental health and wellbeing in schools.
STRONG FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT IS CENTRAL TO EFFECTIVE SCHOOL REFORM Jan Patterson and Ann Bliss Smarter Schools National Partnerships Key Reform.
Pathways and partnerships to support disadvantaged learners in Australian VET Justin Brown VISTA 2011 Annual Conference 23 May 2011.
The Early Years Learning Framework:
Overview of Dr Anne Graham Founding Director. What is the Centre for Children and Young People? Aim ….to contribute to research, policy and practice in.
British Council in Pakistan
PEOPLE CHANGE and LEARNING IN RURAL AUSTRALIA
CLDMS Conference Oct 12 Building a shared understanding of the principles of strengthening communities.
Fuelling young people’s futures
Changing Lives, Delivering Success: Turning Ambition into Action Co-production workshop Purpose: to share and learn from each other’s experiences of co-production.
8 May 2013 Verity Hancock, Principal, Leicester College
What works in careers and enterprise?
What works in careers and enterprise?
An initiative that makes a difference
Suzanne Guerin University College Dublin & ISSE Steering Committee
Supporting careers – developing skills
Presentation transcript:

National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education Funded by the Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations Hosted by the University of South Australia informing student equity policy and practice in Australian higher education

NCSEHE objectives: 1. to produce research and researchers in the field of student equity in higher education 2. to disseminate knowledge about student equity, to researchers, practitioners and policy makers in the higher education sector 3. to facilitate discussion and debate on student equity matters among researchers, practitioners and policy makers 4. to provide advice to practitioners and policy makers in the field

The stats Indigenous people currently constitute 2.2% of the Australian population and yet comprise only 1.3% of all university students. People from low socioeconomic backgrounds are three times less likely to enter university than those from high socioeconomic backgrounds. 25.4% of Australians live in rural and regional areas, but represent only 18.1% of university students

Current projects:  An investigation of Australian universities’ interventions early in school to increase students’ later participation in higher education (funded by DEEWR).  An inquiry into what influences regional and remote students’ participation in higher education (funded by the Thyne Reid Foundation).  An online community and interactive access to quality resources (the Student Equity Exchange) for researchers, practitioners and policy makers in higher education (funded by DEEWR)

Interventions early in school as a means to improve higher education outcomes for disadvantaged (particularly low SES) students Part A: Literature Review

A collaborative effort rather than competitive effort across the sectors: schools, tertiary institutions, non-government organisations, regional authorities, families and communities involving all stakeholder groups in designing and delivering interventions processes of reciprocal feedback

Early, long-term and sustained programs studies of the development of human skills shows that early and continued support for children is likely to have the greatest long-term payoffs programs that are designed to work with primary school children and then continue as they transition into the middle years and on into high school are ideal the last two years of schooling are too late to maximise the effects of an intervention By Year 11 academic achievement patterns are harder to turn around, aspirations are likely to be well established and students may have already selected or been counselled into subject selections and tracks that do not allow them access to the higher education trajectory they may have otherwise taken

People rich ongoing relationships between young people and those in a position to offer them specific guidance that relates to their situation and capacities programs that make a difference need to allow for ongoing conversations, advice and counselling rather than one-off events or products of a generic nature

Cohort based Not ‘cherry picking’ nor ‘scatter gun’ but a targeted group works to change peer cultures at the same time as it supports individuals The cohort is exposed to the idea of university alongside their peers through a range of shared experiences

Getting out of deficit low SES communities have assets that should be recognised and valued as assets (for example linguistic diversity, specific cultural knowledge, etc) a portfolio of evidence which may be considered in the application process

National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education University of South Australia GPO Box 2471 Adelaide South Australia 5001 AUSTRALIA Ph: ; Fax: