Abstract: | This paper considers the rate at which students are crossing the boundaries between Australian vocational and higher education. It finds that public universities admit a higher proportion of students on the basis of a vocational education qualification than do private colleges and that private colleges broadly do not admit a higher proportion of students from a low socioeconomic status background than public universities do. Vocational education transfers are most important in the higher education fields of nursing (22 % of commencing students), education (13 %) and information technology (12 %). Upward transfers are least important in the natural and physical sciences (3.5 %) and engineering and related technologies (6 %). Some 17 % of commencing students are from a low socioeconomic status background, but nursing (24 %) and education (22 %) provide more opportunities for students from a low socioeconomic status background. Conversely, fewer opportunities are provided in architecture and building (12 %) and the creative arts (14 %). There is considerable variation in the proportion of students that higher education institutions admit on the basis of vocational qualifications, even in a relatively homogeneous field such as nursing. Some of this apparent variation may be explained by different treatment of admissions data, but much remains unexplained. |