Regional Participation: The Role of Socioeconomic Status and Access

Regional Participation: The Role of Socioeconomic Status and Access

This report provides information on the factors affecting participation of regional students in Australian universities. In particular, it examines the relative importance of socioeconomic status and access to university in influencing higher education participation across regions.

Abstract

The report shows that regional participation in university among 19-21 year-olds students increased from 18 per cent in 1996 to 21 per cent in 2006. However, university participation among metropolitan students increased faster from 28 per cent to 35 per cent, so that the gap between regional and metropolitan participation increased from 10 percentage points to 12 percentage points.

The report finds that lower socioeconomic status, as measured by education and occupation levels, explains most of the gap in participation between regional, outer metropolitan and inner metropolitan areas. While proximity to campus matters, the report finds that access to university appears to have less influence on university participation than socioeconomic status.

Author(s) Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations

Publication details

Type: 

Statistical publications 

Published: 

12/2009 

Topics covered

Sectors 

Higher education statistic

Detailed 

Higher education statistics

Equity and Access

Rural, regional and remote

Student participation and achievement

Availability

  • Regional Participation: The Role of Socioeconomic Status and Access
    ( PDF 1.8MB RTF 3MB)

 

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