Statistics Explained

Secondary education statistics

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Data extracted in July 2023.

Planned article update: September 2024.

Highlights

In 2021, 2.4% of 14-year-olds, 2.7% of 15-year-olds and 4.3% of 16-year-olds in the EU were not in education. At each age, the out-of-school rates were higher for boys than for girls.

Within upper secondary education, more than two thirds of pupils in 2021 were educated in public sector institutions in almost all of the EU Member States; Belgium (where the share was 40.4%) was the exception.

In 2021, the vast majority (94.7%) of the 1.4 million pupils across the EU in post-secondary non-tertiary education attended vocational programmes.

Men accounted for 37.9% of upper secondary teachers in the EU in 2021, and 31.5% of lower secondary teachers.

[[File:Secondary_education_statistics-interactive_ET2023.xlsx]]

Out-of-school rate of 15 year olds, 2021

This article presents statistics on secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education (ISCED levels 2, 3 and 4) in the European Union (EU) and forms part of an online publication on education and training in the EU.

Pupils enter lower secondary education (ISCED level 2) typically between the ages of 10 and 13 (ages 11 and 12 being the most common), while they normally enter upper secondary education (ISCED level 3) between the ages of 14 and 16 (age 15 being the most common).

In general, compulsory education is completed at the end of lower secondary education, although in some countries it continues into upper secondary education. As its name suggests, post-secondary non-tertiary education (ISCED level 4) starts after the completion of upper secondary education.

School helps young people acquire basic life skills and competences that are necessary for their personal development. The quality of a pupil’s school experience affects not only their development, but also their place in society, level of educational attainment, and employment opportunities.

Full article

Participation by level

a table showing the number of secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education pupils, 2021 in the EU, EU Member States and some of the EFTA countries, candidate countries.
Table 1: Number of secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education pupils, 2021
(1 000)
Source: Eurostat (educ_uoe_enrs01), (educ_uoe_enrs04) and (educ_uoe_enrs07)

In the EU, there were 18.9 million pupils in lower secondary education in 2021 – see Table 1. The number of pupils in upper secondary education was slightly lower, at 18.1 million across the EU.

In 2021, contrary to the situation in the EU as a whole, upper secondary pupils outnumbered lower secondary pupils in most of the EU Member States; Germany and France were among the exceptions. In all of the EFTA countries, there were more upper secondary than lower secondary school pupils. By contrast, in most of the enlargement countries for which data are available there were more pupils in lower than upper secondary education; Türkiye was the exception.

Post-secondary non-tertiary education was by far the smallest of the three education levels covered by this article, with 1.4 million pupils in the EU in 2021. It should be noted that post-secondary non-tertiary education does not exist in some of the EU Member States (Denmark, Croatia, Cyprus, the Netherlands and Slovenia) and is relatively uncommon in several others; it also does not exist in Liechtenstein, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania or Türkiye.

For EU Member States, the number of post-secondary non-tertiary pupils in 2021 compared with the number of upper-secondary pupils ranged from 30.3 % in Germany to less than 2.0 % in Portugal, France, Malta, Bulgaria and Italy. As noted above, this education level does not exist in five Member States.

Public and private secondary education

In the EU, the vast majority (85.9 %) of lower secondary education pupils in 2021 were taught in public institutions, as defined in the UOE methodology – see notes [1]. At least two thirds of lower secondary school pupils were educated in public institutions across the vast majority of EU Member States. The only exceptions were Malta (54.9 %) and Belgium (39.7 %) – see Table 1.

A large majority (82.1 %) of pupils in upper secondary education in the EU were taught in public institutions in 2021. At least two thirds of pupils in upper secondary education were educated in public institutions in nearly all of the EU Member States; the only exception was Belgium where the share was 40.4 %.

Among the EU Member States which have post-secondary non-tertiary education, the situation in 2021 was somewhat different.

  • Ireland, Luxembourg, Portugal and Lithuania each reported that more than 99.0 % of all post-secondary non-tertiary students were educated in public institutions; this pattern was repeated in North Macedonia and Serbia.
  • All post-secondary non-tertiary students were educated in the private sector in Italy, with particularly high shares also observed in Spain (95.3 %) and Poland (89.3 %). Around three quarters of post-secondary non-tertiary students were educated in the private sector in Bulgaria and Belgium.

Participation by type of programme

In the EU, the vast majority (98.0 %) of lower secondary school pupils in 2021 followed a general programme, with the small remainder following vocational programmes.

  • In 12 EU Member States, there were no vocational programmes in lower secondary education. This was also the case in all 10 non-EU countries shown in Table 1.
  • Where vocational programmes existed in lower secondary education, the share of pupils in these programmes (rather than in general programmes) was less than 7.0 % in 13 Member States. The largest share of lower secondary pupils in vocational programmes was 17.1 % in Belgium, while Croatia was the only other EU Member State with a double-digit share.

In the EU, around half (51.3 %) of upper secondary school pupils in 2021 followed a general programme and the other half followed a vocational programme.

  • In total, 14 EU Member States reported a majority of upper secondary pupils following general programmes and 13 reported a majority following vocational programmes.
  • Among the 10 non-EU countries shown in Table 1, three (Iceland, Albania and Türkiye) reported a majority of upper secondary pupils following general programmes and seven a majority in vocational programmes.

In contrast to the situation observed for lower secondary education, the vast majority (94.7 %) of pupils in post-secondary non-tertiary education in 2021 in the EU followed vocational programmes.

  • In 16 of the 22 EU Member States with post-secondary non-tertiary education, all pupils at this level of education were following vocational programmes. In Germany and Belgium, the share of pupils following vocational programmes exceeded 90.0 % and in Sweden the share was 71.0 %.
  • In the three remaining EU Member States with post-secondary non-tertiary programmes, the majority (France and Czechia) or all (Malta) pupils at this level followed general programmes.
  • Among the five non-EU countries shown in Table 1 with vocational programmes at post-secondary non-tertiary level, three exclusively had post-secondary non-tertiary pupils in vocational programmes and two had a majority of pupils at this level in vocational programmes.

Out-of-school rates

a double bar chart showing the out-of-school rate of 15-year-olds in 2021, in the EU, the euro area, EU Member States and some of the EFTA countries, candidate countries. The bars show girls and boys.
Figure 1: Out-of-school rate of 15-year-olds, 2021
(%)
Source: Eurostat (educ_uoe_enra27)

Out-of-school rates can be calculated for individual ages (in years): they are published for 14, 15 and 16-year-olds. These rates show the share of the population at a particular age who were not enrolled in school. In 2021, 2.4 % of 14-year-olds in the EU were out of school, 2.7 % of 15-year-olds and 4.3 % of 16-year-olds. At all three ages, out-of-school rates were somewhat higher for boys than for girls.

Figure 1 presents the out-of-school rate for 15-year-olds. For the EU as a whole, the rates in 2021 were 2.6 % for girls and 2.7 % for boys. Looking across the EU Member States, eight reported rates that were above the EU average (this was the case for the rates for boys, for girls and for both sexes combined). By far the highest rates, both for girls and for boys, were observed in Romania and Bulgaria.

  • In 11 of the Member States, the out-of-school rates for 15-year-old boys in 2021 were higher than for girls.
  • In six of the Member States, the out-of-school rates for 15-year-old boys in 2021 were the same as for girls, with all of these – Germany, Ireland, Croatia, Cyprus, Lithuania and Portugal – reporting 0.0 % rates both for girls and for boys.
  • In 10 of the Member States, the out-of-school rates for 15-year-old boys in 2021 were lower than for girls.
  • In five of the seven non-EU countries for which data are shown in Figure 1, the out-of-school rates for 15-year-old boys in 2021 were lower than for girls; the exceptions were Iceland and Serbia. Relatively high out-of-school rates were observed among girls in Liechtenstein and Albania, with more than 1 in 10 girls of this age out of school.

Graduates from vocational education

two horizontal bar charts with two bars showing the distribution of upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary vocational education graduates by broad field and sex in the EU in 2021. One chart shows upper secondary and one chart shows post-secondary non-tertiary.
Figure 2: Distribution of upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary vocational education graduates by broad field and sex, EU, 2021
(%)
Source: Eurostat (educ_uoe_grad02)

An analysis of pupils graduating from upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary vocational education in the EU is shown in Figure 2. This illustrates which fields of study are most common in vocational programmes in these two education levels and also identifies differences between the sexes within each field.

  • Health and welfare was the fourth largest field for graduates from upper secondary vocational programmes, with a 12.8 % share. By contrast, among graduates from post-secondary non-tertiary vocational programmes, health and welfare was by far the largest field of study, with nearly two fifths (38.8 %) of the total.
  • The three other most common fields of study were the same for graduates of vocational programmes at upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary levels. For graduates from post-secondary non-tertiary vocational programmes, the shares were 17.8 % for business, administration and law, 15.3 % for engineering, manufacturing and construction, and 13.3 % for services. For graduates from upper secondary vocational programmes, the shares were 31.8 % for engineering, manufacturing and construction, 19.4 % for services and 17.9 % for business, administration and law.
  • For both of these levels of education, there were more male graduates than female graduates from the following fields: information and communication technologies; engineering, manufacturing and construction; agriculture, forestry, fisheries and veterinary; and natural sciences, mathematics and statistics.
  • For both of these levels of education, there were more female graduates than male graduates from the following fields: education; health and welfare; social sciences, journalism and information; arts and humanities; business, administration and law; and services.

Teachers and pupil–teacher ratios

a table showing the number of teachers in secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education in 2021 in the EU, EU Member States and some of the EFTA countries, candidate countries.
Table 2: Number of teachers in secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education, 2021
(1 000)
Source: Eurostat (educ_uoe_perp01)

In 2021, there were 1.77 million lower secondary teachers in the EU and a slightly lower number (1.59 million) of upper secondary teachers (see Table 2 for details of coverage); note that the number of lower secondary teachers in the EU is an underestimate, whereas the number of upper secondary education is an overestimate. Unlike their pupils, there was a large gender imbalance among teachers at these educational levels, although less so than the considerable differences observed for early childhood education and primary education.

Within lower secondary education in 2021, men accounted for 31.5 % of all teachers in the EU. Among the EU Member States, male teachers were always in a minority.

  • The share of male teachers in lower secondary education was lowest in the Baltic Member States, below 20.0 %.
  • Among EU Member States, the share of male teachers peaked at 44.5 % in the Netherlands, while among the non-EU countries included in Table 2 the share peaked in Switzerland at 43.3 %.

Men accounted for 37.9 % of upper secondary teachers in the EU in 2021, in other words 6.4 percentage points more than their share for lower secondary education; female teachers were in a majority in all EU Member States. Nevertheless, in all Member States apart from the Netherlands, the gender gap was smaller for upper secondary education than for lower secondary education.

  • The share of male teachers in upper secondary education was lowest in Latvia (20.2 %) and Lithuania (21.7 %).
  • The share of male teachers was above 40.0 % in nine Member States and peaked in Luxembourg (48.6 %) and Denmark (49.0 %).
  • The share of male teachers in upper secondary education was above 30.0 % in all of the non-EU countries for which data are available in Table 2. Switzerland stood out, as men made up a majority (53.8 %) of teachers; note that the Swiss data cover not only upper secondary education but also post-secondary non-tertiary education.

Information on the number (and gender distribution) of teachers for post-secondary non-tertiary education is not available for three EU Member States for 2021, while for six more there is no post-secondary non-tertiary education. Among the 18 Member States for which data are available for this education level, there was a wider range in the gender distribution of teachers for post-secondary non-tertiary education than for lower or upper secondary education.

  • Seven out of eight teachers were male in Malta’s very small post-secondary non-tertiary workforce.
  • More than half of post-secondary non-tertiary teachers were male in Luxembourg (69.3 %), Czechia (58.5 %), France (58.2 %; excluding independent private institutions), Sweden (53.7 %) and Belgium (52.2 %).
  • Less than 3 in 10 post-secondary non-tertiary teachers were male in Austria, Poland and Romania.
a table showing pupil–teacher ratios in secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education in 2021 in the EU, EU Member States and some of the EFTA countries, candidate countries.
Table 3: Pupil–teacher ratios in secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary education, 2021
(number of pupils per teacher)
Source: Eurostat (educ_uoe_perp04)

Pupil–teacher ratios in lower and upper secondary education were broadly similar to those observed for primary education. In 2021, the pupil–teacher ratio for lower secondary education for the EU was 11.6 pupils per teacher, while for upper secondary it was 11.1 pupils per teacher – see Table 3.

Among the EU Member States, the pupil–teacher ratio in lower secondary education was 2.3 times as high in the Netherlands (15.7 pupils per teacher) as it was in Malta (6.7 pupils per teacher) in 2021. Among the non-EU countries included in Table 3, an even higher ratio was observed in Bosnia and Herzegovina (25.9 pupils per teacher; 2019 data).

In 15 of the 25 EU Member States for which 2021 data are available (no data for Ireland or Slovenia), pupil–teacher ratios for lower secondary education were lower than those reported for upper secondary education. This gap was particularly large in Finland and Estonia (note the different coverage for Estonia). Among the 10 Member States with higher pupil–teacher ratios for lower secondary education than for upper secondary education, the largest difference was observed in France (note the incomplete coverage within upper secondary education).

Among the EU Member States, the pupil–teacher ratios in upper secondary education had a wider range than that observed for lower secondary education. The ratio of 17.4 pupils per teacher in the Netherlands in 2021 was 2.5 times as high as the ratio of 7.0 pupils per teacher in Malta and Belgium. Among the non-EU countries included in Table 3, a particularly high ratio was observed in Bosnia and Herzegovina (29.1 pupils per teacher; 2019 data).

The 2021 data for pupil–teacher ratios for post-secondary non-tertiary education are available for 16 of the EU Member States; data are not available for five, while for the other six there is no post-secondary non-tertiary education. Pupil–teacher ratios for post-secondary non-tertiary education were higher than those for upper secondary education in all but five of the 16; the exceptions were Lithuania, Slovakia, Luxembourg, Sweden and Bulgaria.

Looking within post-secondary non-tertiary education, most of the EU Member States reported ratios in 2021 in the range of 8.0 to 15.1 pupils per teacher. Bulgaria reported a particularly low ratio (2.6 pupils per teacher). Higher ratios were observed in Greece (17.1 pupils per teacher), Finland (18.3 pupils per teacher), Latvia (22.6 pupils per teacher), Poland (39.0 pupils per teacher) and most notably Romania (61.0 pupils per teacher).

Source data for tables and graphs

Excel.jpg Secondary education statistics: tables and figures

Data sources

Source

The standards for international statistics on education are set by three international organisations:

The source of data used in this article is a joint UNESCO/OECD/Eurostat (UOE) data collection on education statistics and this is the basis for the core components of Eurostat’s database on education statistics; in combination with the joint data collection Eurostat also collects data on regional enrolments and foreign language learning.

More information about the joint data collection is available in an article on the UOE methodology.

Classification

The international standard classification of education (ISCED) is the basis for international education statistics, describing nine different levels of education.

Key concepts

Pupil–teacher ratios are calculated by dividing the number of full-time equivalent pupils and students in each level of education by the number of full-time equivalent teachers at the same level. This ratio should not be confused with average class size, which refers to the number of students in a given course or classroom.

Context

Demographic developments are reflected in reduced birth rates that, in turn, have impacted upon the structure of the EU’s population: the proportion of people aged under 30 has decreased in a majority of the EU Member States. These changes can have a significant impact on human and material resources required for the sound functioning of education systems, such as average class sizes or teacher recruitment strategies.

A Council Resolution on a strategic framework for European cooperation in education and training towards the European Education Area and beyond, was adopted by the Council in February 2021. It seeks to remove barriers to learning and improve access to quality education for all people through five strategic priorities over the period 2021–2030. These include:

  • improving quality, equity, inclusion and success for all in education and training;
  • enhancing competences and motivation in the education profession; and
  • supporting the green and digital transitions in and through education and training.

Schools are a focus area for cooperation to make the European Education Area a reality, to support Europe’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and to bolster its future resilience.

Seven EU-level targets have been introduced for monitoring progress. They define benchmarks against which performance across education and training may be judged and refer to levels of EU average performance. These include:

  • the share of low-achieving 15-year-olds in reading, mathematics and science should be less than 15 %, by 2030;
  • the share of low-achieving eighth-graders (generally 13-year-olds) in computer and information literacy should be less than 15 %, by 2030; and
  • the share of early leavers from education and training should be less than 9 %, by 2030.

Students typically enter ISCED level 2, or lower secondary education, between the ages of 10 and 13. Programmes at this level are generally designed to build on the learning outcomes from ISCED level 1. They are usually organised around a more subject-oriented curriculum, introducing theoretical concepts across a broad range of subjects. Teachers typically have pedagogical training in specific subjects and a class of students may have several teachers with specialised knowledge of the subjects they teach.

Students typically enter ISCED level 3, or upper secondary education, between the ages of 14 and 16. Programmes at this level are generally designed to complete secondary education in preparation for tertiary education or to provide skills relevant for the labour market, or both. They offer students more varied, specialised and in-depth instruction, while teachers are often highly qualified in the subjects or fields of specialisation they teach.

Post-secondary non-tertiary education (ISCED level 4) provides learning experiences which build on secondary education, preparing students for labour market entry as well as tertiary education. It aims at the individual acquisition of knowledge, skills and competencies, although at a lower level of complexity than is characteristic of tertiary education. Programmes classified at ISCED level 4 may be referred to in many ways, for example: technical diplomas, technicians, or primary professional education.

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Notes

  1. According to the UOE classification, the distinction between public and private is made according to whether a public agency or a private entity has the overall control of the institution and not according to which sector provides the majority of the funding. If a private institution receives the majority of funding from a public agency it is considered to be dependent; if not, it is independent.
Participation in education and training (educ_part)
Education personnel (educ_uoe_per)
Education and training outcomes (educ_outc)