Ipsos · consulting-deck
IPSOS EDUCATION MONITOR 2024
74 pages · 3 arc beats · 2 loops
IPSOS EDUCATION MONITOR 2024
Ipsos arc beats above · slides in the middle · loops below · scroll → 2 LOOPS
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Deck intelligence map
3 coverage by narrative range · generated from this deck JSON
Narrative range 74 total
Metadata
Components
Metrics
Tools
Frameworks
Beats
Loops
Current Reality 5 slides 100% 5/5 slides 100% 5/5 slides · 33 hits — 0/5 slides
— 0/5 slides
— 0/5 slides
100% 5/5 slides — 0/5 slides
Challenges and Trends 15 slides 100% 15/15 slides 100% 15/15 slides · 103 hits — 0/15 slides
66.7% 10/15 slides 6.7% 1/15 slides 100% 15/15 slides — 0/15 slides
Expectations and Opportunities 54 slides 100% 54/54 slides 100% 54/54 slides · 271 hits — 0/54 slides
50% 27/54 slides · 28 hits 1.9% 1/54 slides 100% 54/54 slides 50% 27/54 slides Slide inventory
74 every slide · same image gating as the playbook
02
The slide uses a three-column text layout with a right-aligned photo of graduates.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Current Reality
05
The slide uses a mix of donut charts and icon-based metrics to present survey findings across 30 countries.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Current Reality
07
The slide contrasts objective PISA rankings with subjective public opinion on student performance.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
08
Data sourced from Ipsos Education Monitor 2024.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
09
Data points: 30 countries, 73% (GB bullying), 38% (Türkiye bullying), 59% (global bullying), 61% (Sweden sex ed), 23% (global sex ed), 75% (Mexico sex ed), 67% summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
10
Data points include: 36% (average support for ban), 66% (Boomers), 58% (Gen X), 53% (Millennials), 61% (Gen Z), 68% (Millennials), 66% (Gen X), 66% (Boomers), 6summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
11
The slide uses a multi-column text layout alongside a relevant stock photo of a smartphone displaying an AI assistant.establish_context
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
12
The slide uses polling data to challenge the stereotype that Boomers believe youth have it easy.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
14
The chart uses a trend line to show the correlation between perception and PISA scores, with two highlighted clusters: 'Rightly proud' and 'Should be prouder'.compare_peers
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
16
The chart uses a diverging stacked bar format to compare sentiment (Good, Neither, Poor) across different nations.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
17
The chart is sorted by the 'Better' category in descending order.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
18
The chart displays a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 'A lot harder' to 'A lot easier', with net scores calculated on the right.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
19
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
20
Data from Ipsos Education Monitor 2024, base 23,754 online adults under 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Challenges and Trends
21
The chart shows a consistent trend where women perceive growing up today as harder than men do across all generations.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
22
The chart uses a trend line to show the correlation between current quality and perceived improvement.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
24
The slide presents comparative survey data with 'Agree' and 'Disagree' percentages, alongside country-specific extremes.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
25
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
26
The chart displays 'Agree' (teal) and 'Disagree' (pink) percentages for 30 countries plus a global average, sorted by agreement level.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
27
The chart displays 'Agree' (teal) and 'Disagree' (pink) percentages for 30 countries, sorted by agreement level.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
28
The chart uses a diverging bar structure to show 'Agree' (teal) vs 'Disagree' (pink) percentages across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
29
The chart uses a diverging bar structure to show 'Agree' (teal) vs 'Disagree' (pink) percentages across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
30
Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries, interviewed 21 June – 5 July 2024.analyze_data
31
The data is presented as a heatmap where darker red indicates higher percentages.analyze_data
32
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.compare_options
33
30-country average, base 23,754 online adults under 75, interviewed June-July 2024.analyze_data
34
The slide uses horizontal bar charts to represent the percentage of respondents who feel there is 'too little space' for specific educational areas.analyze_data
36
The chart displays sentiment across four categories: More positive than negative, Equally positive and negative/neutral, No impact, and More negative than positanalyze_data
37
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
38
The chart shows a consistent gender gap where men report higher net positive sentiment than women across all generational cohorts.compare_options
39
Data from Ipsos Education Monitor 2024.compare_options
40
The chart uses a diverging bar structure to show 'Yes' vs 'No' sentiment, with additional columns for 2023 historical data.analyze_data
41
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 adults under 75.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
42
The chart displays 'Agree' (dark purple) and 'Disagree' (light purple) percentages for each country, sorted by the 'Agree' value.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
43
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
45
The chart is a stacked bar chart showing the split of responsibility. The data points represent the percentage of respondents choosing either teachers/schools oanalyze_data
46
The chart shows the percentage of respondents who believe a task is primarily the responsibility of parents, segmented by whether the respondent has children inanalyze_data
47
The chart displays 30 countries plus a global average. Data is sorted by the percentage of respondents who believe it is the responsibility of teachers/schools.analyze_data
48
The chart uses a diverging bar structure where the primary focus is on the 'teachers/schools' responsibility percentage, sorted in descending order.analyze_data
49
The chart uses a diverging bar structure where the primary focus is the 'teachers/schools' percentage, with 'parents' as a secondary, lighter-colored bar.analyze_data
50
The chart uses a diverging bar structure where the dark purple bars represent 'teachers/schools' and light purple bars represent 'parents'.analyze_data
51
The chart uses a diverging bar structure where the primary bars (teachers/schools) are sorted in descending order, with corresponding parent responsibility percanalyze_data
52
The chart is sorted by the 'teachers/schools' responsibility percentage in descending order.analyze_data
53
The chart is sorted by the percentage of respondents who believe it is the responsibility of teachers/schools.analyze_data
54
The chart is a diverging bar chart showing the split between two categories for each country.analyze_data
55
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
56
The chart shows a clear global preference for parents being responsible for teaching moral and ethical values, with India being the only outlier where teachers/analyze_data
57
The chart uses a diverging bar structure where the dark purple bars represent the 'teachers/schools' responsibility percentage, and the light purple bars represanalyze_data
58
The chart displays a clear preference for parental responsibility across almost all surveyed countries, with Thailand and India being notable outliers.analyze_data
59
The chart uses a diverging color scheme to represent sentiment from 'Yes, completely' to 'No, at all'.analyze_data
60
The chart displays 30 countries plus a global average, with responses categorized into four levels of agreement.analyze_data
61
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
62
Data from Ipsos Education Monitor 2024.summarize
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
64
The chart displays three categories: 'Too little space' (purple), 'Just enough space' (yellow), and 'Too much space' (light purple).analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
65
The chart is sorted by the 'Too little space' category in descending order.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
66
The chart displays 30 countries plus a global average, with responses categorized into 'Too little space', 'Just enough space', and 'Too much space'.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
67
The chart displays three categories: 'Too little space' (purple), 'Just enough space' (yellow), and 'Too much space' (light purple).analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
68
The chart is sorted by the 'Too little space' category in descending order.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
69
The chart displays three categories: 'Too little space' (purple), 'Just enough space' (yellow), and 'Too much space' (light purple).analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
70
The chart displays data for 30 countries plus a global average, sorted by the 'Too little space' category.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities
71
Data source: Ipsos Education Monitor 2024. Base: 23,754 online adults under the age of 75 across 30 countries.analyze_data
Open slide detailBeat · Expectations and Opportunities