BACKGROUND COLOUR

Educational equity groups and young people

The GENERATION Study, a national post-school destination survey of year 10 students, asked a number of questions about young people’s identity and sociodemographic background. These questions are important to form a picture of who participated in the study and how priority equity groups are represented. Key equity groups measured in this study include Aboriginal and /or Torres Strait Islander, living in regional or remote locations, identifying as having a disability, and neither parent having completed a university degree. Six in ten (61%) of all participating students identify as being from at least one of these equity groups, with 16% identify as a member of more than two equity groups.

5 %

5% of students identified as being from an Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander background.

9 %

One in ten (9%) students were from a regional or remote area.

15 %

15% of students reported they have had a long term disability for more than 6 months.

51 %

Just over half (51%) of all participants reported that neither of their parents had completed a Bachelor’s Degree, Graduate Certificate or Postgraduate Degree.

How different equity groups intersect with one another
Sources & Methodology
Variable description Participant's identity with different equity groups by membership of equity groups vs non-equity group memebers NOTE: statistics were updated using weighted data on the 4th of September, 2023
Variable time span 2022
Published by Social Research Centre
Publisher Link http://dx.doi.org/10.26193/YMMO4L
Data Source Link Chowdhury, Intifar; Edwards, Ben, 2023, "GENERATION Survey: Young People, 2022 (Wave 1)", doi:10.26193/YMMO4L, ADA Dataverse, V2
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61% of all participating students belonged to at least one equity group, with 45% identifying as being a part of one group, 13% as being a member of two different groups and 3% from 3 or 4 different equity groups.

5% of participants identified as being from an Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander background. Of these students…
- Nine in ten (88%) identified as members of at least one other equity group, with half (51%) identifying with one other equity group and one-third (32%) with two additional equity groups.
- One-quarter (26%) identified as a person with a disability.
- 23% were from a regional area.
- Eight in ten (80%) of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander students reported neither of their parents had completed a university degree.

15% of students reported they had a disability. Of these students…
- Just over half (54%) identified with at least one other equity group.
- 8% of students with a disability identified as being Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.
- One in ten (9%) of students with a disability are from a regional area.
- Half (50%) of students who identified as having a disability reported that neither of their parents had completed a university degree.

9% of students reported being from a regional area. Of these students…
- Almost three-quarters (73%) identified with at least one other equity group.
- 15% identified as being Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.
- 18% identified as a person with a disability.
- 68% of students from regional areas reported that neither of their parents had completed a university degree.

51% of all students reported neither of their parents completed a university degree. Of these students…
- The majority (70%) did not identify with an additional equity group; a quarter (25%) identified with one additional group.
- 11% of students were from a regional area.
- 8% of students also identified as being Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.
- 15% of students reported they had a disability.
- Of the students whose parents were university graduates, 78% did not identify as a member of any equity group.

Students whose parents have not graduated from university by school sector
Sources & Methodology
Variable description Percentage of students in the school who reported that both parents have not graduated from university, by school sector (Independent school and Government School) NOTE: The statistics calculated using non-weighted data
Variable time span 2022
Published by Social Research Centre
Publisher Link http://dx.doi.org/10.26193/YMMO4L
Data Source Link Chowdhury, Intifar; Edwards, Ben, 2023, "GENERATION Survey: Young People, 2022 (Wave 1)", doi:10.26193/YMMO4L, ADA Dataverse, V2
CSV Data
PNG Image
CHART
SOURCES
DOWNLOAD
The largest equity group represented in the GENERATION Study is are those reported that neither of their parents had completed a Bachelor’s Degree, Graduate Certificate or Postgraduate Degree, with just over half (51%) of all students falling into this group. The percentage of their peers whose parents also did not graduate from university differed by school sector, with students from a government school more likely to have more of their peers whose parents did not graduate form university.

Of the Student who participated in the GENERATION study, 50% of students attended a Government school and 42% attended an Independent school.

Government schools had a higher proportion of students whose parents have not graduated from university and were more likely to be at a school where more of their peer's parents also did not graduate from university.

40% of students who attended a Government School that had 70-90% of the student body whose parents have not graduated from university. While almost half (47%) of students who attended an Independent School which had 20-40% of the student body whose parents did not graduate from university.