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Cathy Wylie
PhD from Victoria University of Wellington.
Cathy joined NZCER is 1987. Her main research expertise is education policy and how it impacts learning, teaching, school leadership and more equal learning opportunities.
She led NZCER’s national school surveys from 1989 until recently. She has a leading role in the new research-based tool for schools focused on effective teaching and school practices, and school leadership: the Teaching and School Practices survey tool.
Cathy’s 2012 book, Vital Connections, makes a cogent case for system change to strengthen all our schools and counter uneven educational opportunities.
Her longitudinal study ‘Competent Learners’ provides important understanding about different trajectories of engagement and achievement in learning from early childhood education into early adulthood, and provides strong evidence of the importance of developing the national curriculum’s key competencies.
In 2014 Cathy was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to education.
Cathy's current work includes:
- completing a report of the national 2019 picture from schools using the Teaching and School Practices survey tool
- a bibliography of the research on Scaling Up in education
She was a member of the Government’s Independent Taskforce to Review Tomorrow’s Schools, which published this report in December 2018.
Selected publications:
Policy & School Development
Wylie, C. (2009). What can we learn from the last twenty years?. Paper for 2009 NZARE Conference, Rotorua, NZ, December 2009.
Wylie, C., with Cameron, M., Twist, J., McDowell, S., & Fisher, J. (2009). Conditions for school innovation and transformation. Paper for 22nd ICSEI, Vancouver, January 2009. [214 KB PDF]
Wylie, C. (2007). What can New Zealand learn from Edmonton? NZCER Occasional paper.
Wylie, C. (2007). Snapshot of New Zealand primary schools in 2007 – some key findings from the NZCER national survey. NZCER Report.
Wylie, C. (2007). Can we improve our school governance? set: Research Information for Teachers, 2, pp. 29-30.
Wylie, C. (2007). School governance in New Zealand: How is it working? Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Hipkins, R., Joyce, C., & Wylie, C. (2007). School planning and reporting in action: The early years of the new framework. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Hipkins, R., Wylie, C., & Hodgen, E. (2007). Can standards-based qualifications improve low-performing students’ engagement in learning, and their achievement? Paper given at AERA conference, Chicago.
Wylie, C. (2006). Making the most of research in policymaking. NZCER seminar paper.
Wylie, C. (2006). What is the reality of school competition?. Paper given at AERA conference, San Francisco 7-11 April 2006.
Hodgen, E. & Wylie C. (2005). Stress and wellbeing among New Zealand principals. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Wylie, C. & King, J. (2005). An increasing tightness — pressure points for schools’ financial management. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Wylie, C., & Arago-Kemp, V. (2004). Whaia te iti Kahurangi: NZCER evaluation: 2004. NZCER for Te Rünanga o Ngäti Porou and the Ministry of Education.
Wylie, C., & King, J. (2004). How do effective schools manage their finances? Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Wylie, C., with Mitchell, L. (2003). Sustaining school development in a decentralised system: Lessons from New Zealand. Paper given at ICSEI conference, Sydney, 2003. [pdf file, 53KB]
Wylie, C. (2002). The local and systemic roles of school trustees. Paper given at the annual conference of the New Zealand Association for Research in Education, Palmerston North, 5-8 December 2002. [pdf file, 49KB]
Wylie, C. (2002. Meeting individual educational needs: Legal identification, or systemic support? set: Research Information for Teachers, 2, 22-23. [pdf file, 25KB]
Wylie, C. (2000). New Zealand - innovation and tensions in a devolved education system. In T. Townsend & Y.C. Cheng (Eds.), Educational change and development in the Asia-Pacific region: Challenges for the future. Lisse, Netherlands: Swets & Zeitlinger.
Wylie, C. (2000). Picking up the pieces - review of Special Education 2000 for the Ministers of Education. [choice of Word or pdf file]
Wylie, C. (1999). Is the land of the flightless bird the home of the voucherless voucher? New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 34 (1), 99-109.
Wylie, C. (1999). Ten years on: how schools view educational reform. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Wylie, C. (1998). Can vouchers deliver better education? A review of the literature, with special reference to New Zealand. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research. [pdf file, 489KB]
From the longitudinal Competent Learners (Competent Children) project
Wylie, C. & Hodgen, E. (2007). Competent Learners@ 16: Competency levels and development over time. Wellington: Ministry of Education.
Wylie, C., & Hodgen, E. (2007). The continuing contribution of early childhood education to young people's competency levels. Wellington: Ministry of Education.
Rivers, J., Wylie, C., Hodgen, E., Ferral, H., Dingle, R., Thompson, J., & Hipkins, R. (2006). Growing independence: A summary of key findings from the Competent Learners @14 project. Wellington: Ministry of Education.
Wylie, C. (2006). Why key competencies matter for student development. In Key Competencies: Repackaging the old or creating the new? NZCER Conference Proceedings compiled by Webber, B. Wellington: NZCER Press.
Wylie, C., with Ferral, H. (2005). Patterns of cognitive and personality development: evidence from the longitudinal Competent Children/Learners study. In Low, J., & Jose, P. (Eds). Lifespan Development – New Zealand Perspectives. Auckland: Pearson Education. Pp. 90-100.
Wylie, C., & Hipkins. R. (2006). Growing independence: Competent Learners @14. Wellington: Ministry of Education.
Wylie, C., Hodgen, E., & Ferral, H. (2006). Completely different or a bigger version?: Experiences and effects of the transition to secondary school: Evidence from the Competent Children, Competent Learners project: Final report to the Ministry of Education. Wellington: Ministry of Education.
Wylie, C. (2004). Twelve years old and competent: A summary of the research report — Competent Children at 12. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.
Wylie, C., with Thompson, J. (2003). The long-term contribution of early childhood education to children's performance - evidence from New Zealand. International Journal of Early Years Education, 11 (1), 69-78.
Wylie, C. (2003). Beating the Odds. Factors which can make a difference for New Zealand children in low-income homes. Paper presented at the Connecting Policy, Research and Practice Conference, Wellington Convention Centre, Wellington, April, 2003.
Wylie, C. (2003). Longitudinal research - the Competent Children project. In C. Davidson & M. Tolich (Eds.), Social Science Research in New Zealand. Auckland: Pearson Education.
Wylie, C. (2001). Making sense: Relations between literacy, television use, computer use and other uses of children's time. Paper given at the annual conference of the New Zealand Association for Research in Education, Christchurch, 6-9 December. [pdf file, 51KB]