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Organisation

National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER)

Acronym:
NCVER
Report

Understanding the undertow: innovative responses to labour market disadvantage and VET


Increasing productivity by moving people from welfare to employment is a priority for the Australian Government. This report considers the complex issues of helping those marginalised from the labour market into employment. Case studies of innovative intermediaries illustrate that both demand and supply factors must feature in order to provide successful assistance to disadvantaged job...
Report

Over-skilling and job satisfaction in the Australian labour force


This study builds on previous work by looking at the impact of being over-skilled or over-educated or both on an individual's wages as well as their level of job satisfaction. The study distinguishes between ‘genuine’ mismatch (wages and job satisfaction are both low) and ‘apparent’ mismatch—where a job may pay less but has been accepted...
Report

The impact of wages and the likelihood of employment on the probability of completing an apprenticeship or traineeship


This paper updates an earlier paper by Karmel and Mlotkowski and looks at how the probability of getting a job, in addition to wages, impacts on completion rates. It finds that for trade apprentices the premium (or extra wage completing an apprenticeship brings) attached to becoming a tradesperson is a significant factor, whereas for non-trade...
Report

Australian vocational education and training statistics: the likelihood of completing a VET qualification


The National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER) has released estimated national completion rates data based on enrolments in publicly funded training throughout 2007. Nationally, 27.2% of all vocational education and training (VET) students enrolled in that year are expected to complete their training, the same number estimated for students who enrolled in 2005. For...
Report

The shifting demographics and lifelong learning


This paper was presented at the International Symposium on Lifelong Learning for Poverty Alleviation and Sustainable Development: Developing a Research Agenda for the Asia-Pacific in Hong Kong, 12-13 January 2011. Tom Karmel suggests that there are four implications of an ageing population: the need to improve labour force participation and productivity; the ageing population will...

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