Changes
On April 12, 2018 at 1:05:59 PM +1000, NSW Department of Education:
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Updated description of Enrolments in government schools 1848-2017 from
This dataset includes the number of enrolments in NSW government schools from 1848 to 2017. **Data Notes:** * Primary enrolments relate to students undertaking ordinary public school courses. However, post-primary pupils in superior public schools are included in the primary figures from 1881 to 1907. Primary correspondence school (later distance education centres) pupils are also included from 1938, and the school of the air pupils from 1976. * Post-primary enrolments relate to student undertaking post-primary courses in high, intermediate high, district, junior high, central, superior public schools and correspondence school (later distance education centres) from 1938. Pupils undertaking post- primary courses in small primary schools are also included. Evening continuation school pupils are not included. * For the period from 1881 to 1907 it has not been possible to isolate the number of post-primary pupils in superior public schools and consequently they are included under primary enrolments. This is the reason for the large jump in post-primary enrolments in 1908. * From 1962 all pupils in special schools or classes (except those in some community care schools who were not counted until 1981) are included as appropriate in the primary or post-primary figures and in the total. Prior to 1962 it was difficult to ascertain if these pupils are included. Children in hospital schools and schools for the physically and intellectually disabled are sometimes included in the primary figures during the late 1950s, but physically and intellectually disabled children in special classes in ordinary schools are included from the late 1940s. * The enrolment figures between1848 to 1918 are for the December quarter, with those for 1848 to 1851 and 1866 being estimates. From 1919 the annual census figures are used resulting in a sharp drop in primary and rise in post-primary enrolments in 1919. Pupils from the ACT are included until 1973, at which date they numbered 30,457.
toThis dataset includes the number of enrolments in NSW government schools from 1848 to 2017. **Data Notes:** * Primary enrolments relate to students undertaking ordinary public school courses. However, post-primary pupils in superior public schools are included in the primary figures from 1881 to 1907. Primary correspondence school (later distance education centres) pupils are also included from 1938, and the school of the air pupils from 1976. * Post-primary enrolments relate to student undertaking post-primary courses in high, intermediate high, district, junior high, central, superior public schools and correspondence school (later distance education centres) from 1938. Pupils undertaking post- primary courses in small primary schools are also included. Evening continuation school pupils are not included. * For the period from 1881 to 1907 it has not been possible to isolate the number of post-primary pupils in superior public schools and consequently they are included under primary enrolments. This is the reason for the large jump in post-primary enrolments in 1908. * From 1962 all pupils in special schools or classes (except those in some community care schools who were not counted until 1981) are included as appropriate in the primary or post-primary figures and in the total. Prior to 1962 it was difficult to ascertain if these pupils are included. Children in hospital schools and schools for the physically and intellectually disabled are sometimes included in the primary figures during the late 1950s, but physically and intellectually disabled children in special classes in ordinary schools are included from the late 1940s. * The enrolment figures between1848 to 1918 are for the December quarter, with those for 1848 to 1851 and 1866 being estimates. From 1919 the annual census figures are used resulting in a sharp drop in primary and rise in post-primary enrolments in 1919. Pupils from the ACT are included until 1973, at which date they numbered 30,457. **Data source:** Centre for Education Statistics and Evaluation, NSW Department of Education