Pupil-teacher ratio in post-secondary non-tertiary education (UIS)
Quick info | |
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Data type | Numeric |
Scale | Metric |
Value labels | Not applicable |
Technical name | stud_teach_ratio_psnt_count_uis |
Category | Education and training |
Label | Pupil-teacher ratio in post-secondary non-tertiary education (UIS) |
Related indicators |
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"Average number of pupils per teacher at a given level of education, based on headcounts of both pupils and teachers." (UIS). "A high pupil-teacher ratio suggests that each teacher has to be responsible for a large number of pupils. In other words, the higher the pupil/teacher ratio, the lower the relative access of pupils to teachers. It is generally assumed that a low pupil-teacher ratio signifies smaller classes, which enables the teacher to pay more attention to individual students, which may in the long run result in a better performance of the pupils." (UIS).
Coding rules
"Divide the total number of pupils enrolled at the specified level of education by the number of teachers at the same level." (UIS).
Bibliographic info
Citation: UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS), http://data.uis.unesco.org/, Last accessed: 2020.03.10
Related publications:
Misc
Project manager(s): Fabian Besche-Truthe, Michael Windzio, Helen Seitzer
- Version 0.001: Initial release
Revisions: No revisions yet
Sources
NA (no information available)