Youth Training - Statistical Profile 1999 to 2008
Publication Details
This report provides participation and labour market outcome analysis of the Youth Training programme between 1999 and 2008, using the Youth Training administrative dataset. This is the first time this information has been made available in a single analysis.
The report provides analyses of participation in the programme, and provides statistical modelling of the factors related to transition to Youth Training from school, and the factors associated with labour market outcomes two months after leaving placements.
Author(s): Paul Mahoney, Senior Research Analyst, Tertiary Sector Performance Analysis and Reporting Division [Ministry of Education]
Date Published: February 2010
3. The Youth Training Programme
Youth Training is part of a suite of vocational education and training programmes in operation in New Zealand, which are referred to collectively as Targeted Training Programmes. These also include Training Opportunities and until 2009, Skill Enhancement. They are referenced as targeted because they are open only to participation by people who meet certain eligibility criteria.
Youth Training’s genesis lies in the Training Opportunities programme in operation from 1993 to 1998, which in turn evolved from Access programmes. ACCESS was principally targeted towards people who were disadvantaged in the labour market, and for whom traditional training methods were unsuitable or unavailable.1 ACCESS was open entry with a level of funding for each trainee based on the level of disadvantage they faced. Māori ACCESS (MACCESS) ran alongside, and was separately administered by Māori authorities. It focused specifically on Māori, and was largely delivered through Māori providers.
The Training Opportunities Programme (TOPS) developed out of ACCESS at the start of 1993, and MACCESS was subsumed into TOPS later that year. TOPS retained some of the features of ACCESS, but it was targeted more specifically at school leavers and long-term job seekers with low or no qualifications. It aimed to assist them gain recognised qualifications (or credit towards them), and to move into further education and training or employment.
TOPS was funded through Vote: Education and administered by Skill New Zealand until 1998, when a decision was made to split it into two streams: Training Opportunities, funded through Vote: Social Development, which retained its focus on work-training for long-term unemployed Work and Income clients; and Youth Training, funded through Vote: Education to provide work-readiness training for young learners with low or no qualifications. Both programmes continue to be administered by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC).
Youth Training is funded to provide training to school leavers with no or low qualifications. It focuses on learners acquiring a valuable set of foundation skills that enable them to move effectively into sustainable employment and/or higher levels of tertiary education.2
The programmes are required to have a labour market focus, reflected in training that:
- leads towards national qualifications
- meets local industry and employer requirements
- is mainly at Levels 1 to 3 on the National Qualifications Framework
- is full-time, with typically 30 hours a week or more of tutor contact time
- includes workplace learning.3
Training is provided by Tertiary Education Organisations (TEOs) who are required to be New Zealand Qualification Authority (NZQA) registered. Providers offering Youth Training include (or have included): marae; charitable trusts; employers; government training establishments; incorporated societies, kokiri centres; local authorities; private training establishments; polytechnics and institutes of technology; schools; universities and wananga.
The data used in this report is sourced from the TEC, who collects it for administration purposes. The data is used to reimburse training providers for training services provided, and is considered to be robust. Providers are required to track each learner’s outcomes two months after the end of their training. These activities are referred to as Labour Market Outcomes (LMOs), and form the basis of funding accountability of providers to the TEC. Any employment and further progressive education activity engaged in by the learner two months after leaving Youth Training is regarded as a positive outcome, while unemployment and ‘out of the labour force’ status is considered to be a negative outcome for accountability purposes.4
Some commentators have reflected on the utility of such an approach to measuring the outcomes of targeted training programmes, in particular, the duration of positive outcomes, as well as the implied causality of outcomes.5 This paper does not attempt to address these questions, focusing instead on gathering and analysing the programme–related datasets. As such, it is limited in what it can tell us about Youth Training. Future analytical work may include employment and other activities of Youth Training learners long-term, using education, tax collection, benefit receipt and other sources of data. 6
Footnotes
- Ministry of Education, 2002. Pgs. 6-7.
- TEC, 2007. Pg. 4
- Ibid, pg. 5.
- Output sections of this paper analyses ‘leaving the placement’ outcomes, which can be regarded as either as positive or negative. There is a separate reporting regime ‘leaving the programme’ which has a different emphasis. Under the leaving the programme regime, returning to Youth Training would not be considered to be a positive outcome, while under the leaving the placement regime it would.
- Stolte, 2004. This argument is applied to outcome measures used in the Training Opportunities programme. However, this form of outcome reporting also applies to Youth Training.
- Statistics New Zealand is currently managing a project to manage the feasibility of matching tax and tertiary education administrative data. While targeted training is not part of the feasibility project, it may be included if the feasibility is established and if the project is put into production.
Downloads / Links
Sections
- 1. Executive Summary
- 2. Introduction
- 3. The Youth Training Programme
- 4. Participation in Youth Training by demographic factors
- 5. Participation by Provider, Course-related and other factors
- 6. Participation frequency and duration
- 7. Credit attainment
- 8. Placement Outcomes
- 9. Statistics modelling using schools data
- 10. Outcome modelling
- 11. Conclusions
- 12. References
- 13. Appendices
- Downloads
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