Participation, inclusiveness, academic drift and parity of esteem: a comparison of post-compulsory education and training in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
Permanent URL for this page: http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/149874.
Author: Raffe, David; Brannen, Karen; Fairgrieve, Joan; Martin, Chris
Abstract:
This paper examines the post-compulsory education and training (PCET) systems of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, using cohort survey data for the early 1990s. It compares these systems with respect to four issues of current policy concern: participation, inclusiveness, academic drift and parity of esteem. It asks how a system's performance on these four criteria varied according to the degree of 'unification' of PCET, that is, the extent to which academic and vocational tracks were linked or combined within a unified system. In the early 1990s Scotland was the most unified system (with the strongest divisions between tracks). The paper finds no clear link between unification and participation in PCET. The two systems with the highest levels of participation were Northern Ireland and Scotland, respectively the least unified and the most unified systems. However the Scottish system was slightly less inclusive than the other three systems, as indicated by a slightly stronger association between participation and prior attainment and/or social class. Academic drift - measured by participation in academic rather than vocational tracks - was more pronounced in Scotland than elsewhere. There was no clear association between unification and parity of esteem, as indicated by the relative educational backgrounds of entrants to vocational and academic tracks: entry to academic rather than vocational courses was more skewed towards high attainers in both Scotland and Northern Ireland than in England and Wales. Participation in the academic track was also relatively skewed towards males in England compared with elsewhere. The paper concludes that there is unlikely to be a simple causal connection between unification and participation, inclusion, academic drift or parity. However it suggests that a strong work-based sector is more important for participation and inclusiveness, while a strong full-time vocational sector is more important for parity and avoiding academic drift.
Published abstract reprinted by permission of the copyright owner.
[-] Show lessThis paper examines the post-compulsory education and training (PCET) systems of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, using cohort survey data for the early 1990s. It compares these systems with respect to four issues of current policy concern: participation, inclusiveness, academic drift and parity of esteem. It asks how a system's performance on these four criteria varied according to the degree of 'unification' of PCET, that is, the extent to which academic and vocational tracks were linked or combined within a unified system. In the early 1990s Scotland was ... [+] Show more
Subjects: Vocational education and training; Participation; Research; Teaching and learning; Equity
Keywords: Comparative analysis; Research project; Postcompulsory education; Social status
Geographic subjects: Europe; Great Britain
Published: London, England: Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis, 2001
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Journal title: Oxford review of education
Journal volume : 27
Journal number: 2
Journal date: June 2001
Pages: pp.173-203
ISSN: 0305-4985; 1465-3915 (online)
Statement of responsibility: David Raffe, Karen Brannen, Joan Fairgrieve & Chris Martin
Resource type: Article
Call Number:
TD/TNC 66.339
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