Easing the Transition from Primary to Secondary Schooling: Helpful information for schools to consider

Easing the Transition from Primary to Secondary Sc…
03 Jun 2010
pdf
Easing the Transition from Primary to Secondary Sc…
03 Jun 2010
doc

The present report is the last in a series of three. Each report presents findings from a Ministry of Education project A Study of Students’ Transition from Primary to Secondary Schooling.

Key Results

  • Most students quite quickly adapted to the more immediate changes inherent in a move from primary to secondary school, such as finding their way around in the new school, moving classes, becoming familiar with different rules and routines, and making new friends.
  • Also, by the end of their first year at secondary school:
    • overall, Year 9 students reported many positive experiences at school;
    • in the majority of cases, after a dip earlier in the year, in mathematics in particular, students’ asTTle3 test results revealed sound or good achievement gains; and
    • few students expressed a desire to ‘go back to how things were’ at primary or intermediate school.
  • But, at the same time, the Year 8–9 transition represented a time of significant, deeper-level change and was generally ‘unsettling’ for students.
  • Other significant findings included that for an important minority of students (around 10%), the Year 8 to Year 9 transition was a particularly challenging time, academically and/or socially, and exacerbated in some cases by emotional issues or difficult home circumstances. Late in Year 9, some of these students continued to express a preference for primary over secondary schooling.
  • Evidence from other recent studies, as well as the transition study itself, show that during the middle years of schooling (Years 7 to 10) more vulnerable students in terms of their progress and well-being at school tend to become increasingly disengaged from learning and from school generally. This puts them at particular risk of achieving few if any qualifications to equip them for a positive future and of dropping out of school altogether.
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