January 15, 2016

Who got the numbers, how, and why?

The Dominion Post has what I’m told is a front page story about school costs, with some numbers:

For children starting state school this year, the total cost, including fees, extracurricular activities, other necessities, transport and computers, by the time they finish year 13 in 2028 is estimated at $35,064 by education-focused savings trust Australian Scholarship Group.

That increases to $95,918 for a child at a state-integrated school, and $279,807 for private school.

Given that the figures involve extrapolation of both real cost increases and inflation thirteen years into the future, I’m not convinced that a whole-education total is all that useful. I would have thought estimates for a single year would be more easily interpreted.  However, that’s not the main issue.

ASG do this routinely. They don’t have the 2016 numbers on their website yet, but they do have last year’s version. Important things to note about the numbers, from that link:

ASG conducted an online education costs survey among its members during October 2013. The surveys covered primary and secondary school. In all, ASG received more than 1000 survey responses.

So, it’s a non-random, unweighted survey, probably with a low response rate, among people signed up for an education-savings programme. You’d expect it to overestimate, but it’s not clear how much. Also

Figures have been rounded and represent the upper ranges that parents can reasonably expect to pay

‘Rounded’ is good, even though they don’t actually show much sign of having been rounded. ‘Represent the upper ranges’ is a bit more worrying when there’s no indication of how this was done — and when the Dom Post didn’t include this caveat in their story.

 

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Thomas Lumley (@tslumley) is Professor of Biostatistics at the University of Auckland. His research interests include semiparametric models, survey sampling, statistical computing, foundations of statistics, and whatever methodological problems his medical collaborators come up with. He also blogs at Biased and Inefficient See all posts by Thomas Lumley »

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