Profile & Trends 2008: New Zealand's Tertiary Education Sector
This is edition 11 in an annual series on the tertiary education sector. Profile & Trends 2008 has three supporting booklets – The tertiary education system, What the sector provides and Finding out more about tertiary education. It also has an associated set of tables available on the Tertiary Education Statistics page here on Education Counts.
The short articles in Profile & Trends 2008 cover the following topics: Recent changes to higher education policy and funding in Australia and Scotland; Trends in the demand for tertiary education; Trends in fields of study of bachelors degree graduates; and New Zealand’s industry training data.
Author: Tertiary Sector Performance Analysis and Reporting, Ministry of EducationDate Published: November 2009
Skip to:
- An overview
- Enrolments in 2008
- Outcomes of tertiary education
- Workplace-based learning
- Level 1 to 3 provider-based qualifications
- Non-degree level 4 to 7 provider-based qualifications
- Bachelors and postgraduate qualifications
- Student support
- Research in the tertiary education sector
- Sector capability
- Investing in knowledge and skills
- The year 2008 in brief
- Short Articles
- Downloads
Level 1 to 3 provider-based qualifications
In 2008, enrolments in level 1 to 3 qualifications represented 23 percent of all equivalent full-time student units in formal provider-based tertiary education.
Level 1 to 3 qualifications cover provision funded in a range of ways. Most provision at these levels is funded through the student achievement component and includes enrolments in level 1 to 3 certificate courses at polytechnics, wānanga and private training establishments. These courses can be divided into those that cover vocational certificates, which focus on work-related skills, and foundation certificates, which focus on general skills, literacy and language. For people who are disadvantaged in the labour market, the government provides targeted training programmes through Training Opportunities and Youth Training. In addition, schools purchase courses at levels 1 to 3 from tertiary education providers through the Secondary-Tertiary Alignment Resource (STAR). Not many international students study at this level.
Enrolments in provider-based level 1 to 3 certificates have continued to decrease since 2005. The number of students in vocational certificates decreased from 2007 to 2008 by 12 percent and in foundation certificates by 14 percent. Over the same period, the number of students in Youth Training decreased by 2.8 percent. Contrary to this trend, the number of students in Training Opportunities increased by 3.1 percent from 2007 to 2008.
The decreases in certificate-level enrolments reflect the continued effects of policy and funding changes introduced in 2005 as well as improvements in the labour market in the period up to the middle of 2008. This was before the employment effects of the current recession had begun to be felt. Most people enrolled in level 1 to 3 certificates were already in employment and the strong labour market at that time made work more attractive than continuing in study. This is also evident in the decreasing retention, completion and progression rates for students in level 1 to 3 certificates. The decrease in Youth Training numbers is also due to tighter restrictions on gaining exemptions from school, which can be seen most clearly in the reduced number of under-16-year-olds on the programme.
The decreased participation has also been the result of the full implementation of reviews of quality and relevance of provision at this level, as described in the 2006 edition of Profile & Trends. This has had an impact on the number of students in foundation certificates and in courses of less than one week. The outcomes of these reviews were carried through into the agreements made for the 2008 to 2011 investment plans of tertiary education organisations.
Figure 1.5: Students in level 1 to 3 provider-based qualifications



