DataNB Graduate Retention Series
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New Brunswick invests substantially in educating its students. These reports examine graduate retention rates and factors that may be influencing New Brunswickers' decisions to stay and work in the province.
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Browsing DataNB Graduate Retention Series by Author "Jones, Bethany"
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Item Graduate retention in New Brunswick: Supplementary report on graduates in social work(New Brunswick Institute for Research, Data and Training, 2023-05) Jones, Bethany; McDonald, Ted; Miah, PabloIn January 2023, the New Brunswick Institute for Research, Data and Training released a report called Graduate retention in New Brunswick: 2019 and 2020 cohort update (Balzer et al.), 1 which gave an overview of post-secondary graduates’ retention patterns, disaggregated by their field of study. While this provided many valuable insights into graduates’ education and mobility decisions, the fields of study examined were purposely broad. This allowed for comparison between graduates of programs in arts, science, business, and healthcare, for instance, but it did not allow for a narrower focus on the outcomes of graduates of specific fields of interest. In New Brunswick, social work is one such field of interest. The retention of social work graduates 2 is an important topic in the public sphere, as social work has been identified as the second highest profession in need of a recruitment and retention strategy in New Brunswick, and pre-pandemic projections suggest the province could have a shortage of 272 social workers by 2030 (New Brunswick Association of Social Workers [NBASW], 2022). Given the increased demand for social workers since the start of COVID-19, this shortage could be even greater (NBASW, 2022). This study focuses on the retention of social work graduates in New Brunswick and acts as a supplement to the earlier work by Balzer et al. (2023), using the same data and methodology but further breaking down the field of study category to examine social work specifically. The findings in this report provide an overview of social work graduates’ demographic backgrounds and mobility decisions and can help guide public policy discussions around education and training strategies to retain social workers in NB. 1 Graduate retention in New Brunswick: 2019 and 2020 cohort update (Balzer et al., 2023) 2 In this report, we refer to graduates of university social work programs and college social service community worker programs as “social work graduates.”Item Maintien des diplômés universitaires au Nouveau-Brunswick: Mise à jour des résultats pour la cohorte des diplômés de 2022(2025-05) Beykzadeh, Ali; Jones, Bethany; McDonald, Ted; Miah, PabloEn 2021, l'Institut de recherche, de données et de formation du Nouveau-Brunswick (IRDF-NB) a publié le premier rapport d'une série intitulée « Rétention des diplômés au Nouveau-Brunswick ». Chaque année, nous utilisons les données les plus récentes disponibles pour répondre à une liste de questions de recherche, en soulignant l'évolution des résultats depuis la publication du dernier rapport de la série. Nous posons, par exemple, les questions suivantes : • Combien d'étudiants obtiennent leur diplôme dans les universités publiques du Nouveau-Brunswick, et quel pourcentage d'entre eux restent dans la province au fil du temps ? • En quoi les résultats diffèrent-ils pour les étudiants du Nouveau-Brunswick, les étudiants internationaux et les étudiants d'autres provinces du Canada ? • Les diplômés de certaines filières sont-ils plus susceptibles de rester au Nouveau-Brunswick que les autres ? • Quelle université affiche les taux de rétention des diplômés les plus élevés, et pourquoi ? Il s'agit de la quatrième mise à jour de la série, et c'est la première fois que les résultats des diplômés des collèges et des universités sont présentés séparément, en raison des différences dans les délais de disponibilité des données. Ce rapport met à jour nos travaux les plus récents (qui intégraient les résultats des étudiants diplômés en 2021) en présentant les résultats annuels des étudiants diplômés des universités du Nouveau-Brunswick entre 2010 et 2022. Les résultats des diplômés des collèges feront l'objet d'un rapport distinct.Item Technical Appendix: University Graduate Retention in New Brunswick: 2022 Graduate Cohort Update(New Brunswick Institute for Research, Data and Training, 2025-05) Beykzadeh, Ali; Jones, Bethany; McDonald, TedThis technical appendix provides detailed statistical tables and data supporting the report "University Graduate Retention in New Brunswick: 2022 Graduate Cohort Update." It includes retention rates disaggregated by year, sex, previous residence, educational institution, level of education, and field of study. The data facilitates deeper exploration and verification of findings presented in the main report.Item University graduate retention in New Brunswick: 2022 graduate cohort update(New Brunswick Institute for Research, Data and Training, 2025-06) Beykzadeh, Ali; Jones, Bethany; McDonald, Ted; Miah, PabloIn 2021, the New Brunswick Institute for Research, Data and Training (NB-IRDT) released the first report in a Graduate retention in New Brunswick series. Each year, we use the newest data available to answer a list of research questions, highlighting how results have changed since the last report in the series was released. We ask, for instance: • How many students graduate from publicly funded universities in NB, and what percentage remain in NB over time? • How do results differ for students from NB, international students and students from other provinces in Canada? • Are graduates from certain fields of study more likely to remain in NB than others? • Which university has the highest graduate retention rates, and why? This is the fourth update in the series, and it represents the first time that results for college and university graduates are being presented separately – due to differences in data availability timelines. This report updates our most recent work (which incorporated results for students who graduated in 2021) by presenting annual results for students who graduated from universities in NB between 2010 and 2022. Results for college graduates are forthcoming in a separate report.