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How can education contribute to the recovery

How can education contribute to the recovery. Education builds social and human capital and creates knowledge. And provides people with the skills they need to participate in the workforce. So there are social and individual returns to education

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How can education contribute to the recovery

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  1. How can education contribute to the recovery

  2. Education builds social and human capital and creates knowledge. • And provides people with the skills they need to participate in the workforce. • So there are social and individual returns to education • The best returns to education come from educating younger people – so the costs of getting it wrong for youth are highest. • And unemployment is disproportionately borne by the young. • So we need a particular focus on youth.

  3. Education is a major enterprise in Canterbury. • Before the earthquakes, the Canterbury education sector had operating revenue of $1.31 billion and employed 11,000 people • Public education organisations held about $1.32 billion in capital assets. • International education generated $200 million a year, had overall economic impact of $300 million and supported 2,000 jobs in the region • Tertiary institutions won $56 million a year in research contracts • Per capita, the tertiary sector in greater Christchurch enrolled more students than either Auckland or Wellington

  4. In Christchurch now … there are extra risks • greater levels of disengagement from the education system and the labour market • too many young people are leaving education without qualifications and skills • and higher youth unemployment as the local economy readjusts • rationalisation in the industries that employ lower-skilled people means that it will get harder for those without qualifications to get work • the rebuild could see young people working in low skill jobs but vulnerable as the boom winds down • young people need portable skills

  5. We need to • get the pathways through the education system working better • build understanding by education of employer needs and conversely • get more leverage from the knowledge and resources of our education system • build better links between the research community, firms and TEIs as a means of supporting industry and strengthening the local economy

  6. This talk • Looks at the state of educational achievement and youth transitions in the region – as it was and is now • Identifies the labour market outcomes for young people • Explains what the education leaders in Canterbury are doing about it • Describes the challenges ahead of us • Looks at what we are coming up with in our renewal plan • First – Where are the young people in Christchurch? What are they doing?

  7. School leaver achievement • Between 5,500 and 6,000 leavers each year • About 30% don’t get to level 2 – the minimum for recognition in the labour market • And for progression to meaningful higher education

  8. School leavers • One in five school leavers has had no further training by age 20 • But double that for Māori and Pasifika • And for those with low school achievement • So those who need education most access it least • The graph shows the proportion of leavers from Christchurch schools who don’t go on to tertiary • Or who go on to programmes like the Youth Guarantee. • Key finding: most people who have low/no school achievement end up not doing tertiary education

  9. School leaver achievement and destinations • Big variations between schools – and not all due to decile • Examples .... • In one school, only half of the 2009 leavers had NCEA 2 or higher • And 15% had no achievement • And of the no achievement leavers, 83% took no further education on leaving school • High risk of being NEET

  10. School leaver achievement and destinations – variations between schools

  11. How well does the system supply the local labour market? • A high number of tertiary completions • including industry training • The qualification profile of the population in the region is lower than NZ as a whole • More with trades qualifications, but fewer with degrees • So at higher levels, Christchurch is supplying the Auckland and Wellington labour markets

  12. NEET and employment • Until now unemployment and NEET in Christchurch have been better than NZ as a whole • For all age groups • But recent trends are worrying • The graph shows the NEET rate for 20-24 year olds in the June quarters • September NEET data looks better but Canterbury is still rising, while NZ is falling

  13. NEET and employment • Between September 2010 and September 2011 • The number of young people in Canterbury has fallen by 7% • The number in employment has dropped by 22% • The number not in the labour force is up 17% • The number in education has been stable • More in the school system balancing the fall off in tertiary enrolments • Overall message – more young people disengaged and more leaving the area

  14. Key messages • The region has a skill profile little different from NZ as a whole • But the region doesn’t have the high skill/ high education/ high earnings levels of other metropolitan areas • NEET, unemployment have been better than NZ as a whole • But recent trends show deterioration • Mixed performance in the school system • Too many school leavers without adequate qualifications and skills • And high levels of disparity – Māori and Pasifika do worse • At higher qualification levels, Christchurch providers supply other labour markets • Lower tertiary enrolments in 2011 pose a high risk to future income streams • While providers face higher costs

  15. The outlook • The CDC/DoL forecast model sees a short-term construction boom to deal with the residential repair/rebuild • With the commercial rebuild spread over a longer period • The education system is working to improve, increase and speed up training for the construction trades • We need to be sure: • There are sustainable careers for those we encourage into that pipeline • We don’t hollow out recruitment into the firms/industries our tradable sector depends on • We have clear and consistent messaging about the forecasts, the outlook for youth and the importance of education

  16. We need • All school leavers to have level 2 NCEA or higher • so they have options for tertiary study • so they are more likely to be productive, even if they don’t want to get into tertiary study • and so their skills are more portable • More people getting higher qualifications in tertiary education • And better tertiary/employment linkages so Canterbury can capture more of the skills we produce • So we grow the base of skills in this community to ensure: • we sustain the tradable economy during the construction boom • we avoid the risk of reconstruction crowding out the production • those we get into construction have portable skills and qualifications

  17. What are we doing about it

  18. Important challenges for us • Better pathways and transitions – within education and between education and employment • Getting more from Youth Guarantee and trades academies • More active management of young people at risk – with earlier intervention • Better careers advice and support • Better understanding of employers’ needs by education and conversely • Leading to better alignment of supply and demand • More leverage from the knowledge and expertise resources of our education system • Better research/business/education links

  19. We have made progress • More places for the trades academies – and a new approach to make sure training is more widely available • He Toki Ki Te Rika – a new Māori trades training initiative • Enhanced pre-tertiary bridging programmes • Canterbury job matcher portal – run by Careers NZ • New scholarships for Canterbury school leavers moving to tertiary study • Youth guarantee and vocational pathways through NCEA • The Government’s Skills for Canterbury package • And coming up … a new youth transition service for young people at risk

  20. We have made progress • And NCEA results for Canterbury schools from 2011 look promising • Schools have faced great difficulties but have worked hard to manage the challenges they faced • But be careful … there may be selection effects at play

  21. But challenges remain • We need to encourage people to stay longer in school, getting higher qualifications and more skills • That will sustain them beyond the construction boom • Reconstruction is necessary for recovery, but we need to keep developing the skills needed for the long-term growth and development of the economy – the industries that will sustain us in the longer term • We need avoid the risk that reconstruction crowds out the real productive sectors • We need the active support of the business community

  22. The education renewal/recovery plan • Possible proposals cover: • More collaboration and coordination across the system • Collaboration in capital planning → shared use of facilities • Look for areas to rationalise where there is duplication • Cost reductions without loss of quality • Better education/work links • Including employers committing to training for unskilled employees • And better business/university research links • To capture more research funding, building on our strengths • Collaborative marketing of Christchurch as an education city • Domestic and international • Create a shared private tertiary campus as part of the rebuild • A new approach to managing youth at risk • Earlier intervention and better information sharing

  23. Partnership with business leaders Better business/education links: • If you employ a young person without skills or qualifications, we want you to support that person in training • Internships for secondary/tertiary students? • Make better use of local tertiary institutions when you recruit? • Partnerships with local tertiary institutions • Research contracts related to developing your business? • Providing skills when you look at opportunities for expansion/investment? • A private tertiary education facility – an investment opportunity?

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