Transient students in New Zealand
By territorial authority, 2022, number of students
Territorial authority | Number of students |
---|---|
Far North | 201 |
Whangārei | 160 |
Kaipara | 63 |
Auckland | 1,022 |
Thames-Coromandel | 61 |
Hauraki | 65 |
Waikato | 125 |
Matamata-Piako | 86 |
Hamilton | 281 |
Waipā | 90 |
Ōtorohanga | 26 |
South Waikato | 58 |
Waitomo | 34 |
Taupō | 82 |
Western Bay of Plenty | 95 |
Tauranga | 146 |
Rotorua | 154 |
Whakatāne | 72 |
Kawerau | 29 |
Ōpōtiki | 25 |
Gisborne | 112 |
Wairoa | 31 |
Hastings | 110 |
Napier | 84 |
Central Hawke's Bay | 28 |
New Plymouth | 78 |
Stratford | 8 |
South Taranaki | 65 |
Ruapehu | 38 |
Whanganui | 70 |
Rangitīkei | 21 |
Manawatū | 36 |
Palmerston North | 129 |
Tararua | 40 |
Horowhenua | 67 |
Kāpiti Coast | 46 |
Porirua | 62 |
Upper Hutt | 25 |
Lower Hutt | 86 |
Wellington | 81 |
Masterton | 24 |
Carterton | 7 |
South Wairarapa | 16 |
Tasman | 73 |
Nelson | 34 |
Marlborough | 32 |
Kaikōura | 5 |
Buller | 14 |
Grey | 21 |
Westland | 15 |
Hurunui | 19 |
Waimakariri | 28 |
Christchurch | 263 |
Selwyn | 53 |
Ashburton | 59 |
Timaru | 34 |
Mackenzie | 11 |
Waimate | 13 |
Chatham Islands | 7 |
Waitaki | 29 |
Central Otago | 24 |
Queenstown-Lakes | 121 |
Dunedin | 62 |
Clutha | 36 |
Southland | 58 |
Gore | 14 |
Invercargill | 48 |
Definitions
Transient students: Number of students who changed school twice or more during the period of 1st March to 1st November.
Rate of transient students: Number of students who changed school twice or more during the period of 1st March to 1st November, divided by total number of students who attended school at on July 1st of each respective year.
Data calculation/treatment
For school-based measures (Decile, Regional Council, Territorial Authority), students are counted once for each category for which they attended. For example, in a given year between March and November if a student attends a Decile 7 school in Auckland, then a Decile 7 school in Waikato, then a Decile 6 school in Waikato; this student is counted once each in the categories for Decile 6, Decile 7, Auckland and Waikato.
Home-schooling is counted as a school for the purposes of this indicator, though is generally only included under totals when examining geographically related variables.
Limitations of the data
Transience during has only been examined for the period 1st March to 1st November.
Children who started school part way through the measurement period were counted in this indicator, both in the denominator and, if they had two or more moves during the period, the numerator of the rate. Starting school for the first time did not count towards the school moves for these children.
Exclusions
International Fee paying students and adult students (older than 19).
Data provided by
Dataset name
School Student Engagement and Participation: Transient students 2023
Webpage:
https://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/statistics/transient-students
How to find the data
At URL provided, select 'Time Series: Transient students (2011-2022)' from the 'Time Series' section.
Import & extraction details
File as imported: School Student Engagement and Participation: Transient students 2023
From the dataset School Student Engagement and Participation: Transient students 2023, this data was extracted:
- Sheet: 7-TA number
- Range:
C4:M92
- Provided: 748 data points
This data forms the table Education - Transient students by territorial authority 2012–2022.
Dataset originally released on:
February 2024
Purpose of collection
Students need stability in their schooling in order to experience continuity, belonging and support if they are to stay interested and engaged in learning. All schools face the constant challenge of ensuring that all students feel they belong and are encouraged to participate at school. When students arrive at a school part-way through a term or school year, having been at another school with different routines, this challenge may become even greater for the school.
Students have better outcomes if they do not move school regularly. There is good evidence that student transience has a negative impact on student outcomes, both in New Zealand and overseas. Research suggests that students who move home or school frequently are more likely to underachieve in formal education when compared with students that have a more stable home and school life. A recent study even found that school movement had an even stronger effect on educational success than residential movement.
There is also evidence that transience can have negative effects on student behaviour, and on short term social and health experiences.