Filling a youth-shaped gap in the FE White Paper: Reducing inequalities in post-16 progression
By Blog Editor, IOE Digital, on 16 February 2021
16 February 2021
By Ruth Lupton, Stephanie Thomson, Lorna Unwin and Sanne Velthuis
IOE Blog
HomeExpert opinion from IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society
By Blog Editor, IOE Digital, on 16 February 2021
16 February 2021
By Ruth Lupton, Stephanie Thomson, Lorna Unwin and Sanne Velthuis
By Blog Editor, IOE Digital, on 25 January 2021
By Andy Green
The much-delayed Government White Paper on skills (Skills for Jobs: Lifelong Learning for Opportunities and Growth), published last Thursday, holds few surprises; it has already been widely trailed in Government announcements and reforms over the past year. What is most notable, though – and very welcome – is its unusually strong statements about the centrality of Further Education Colleges to the Government’s skills agenda in post-Brexit Britain, arguably a distinctive contribution from the current Secretary of State for Education.
In his strategic speech to the Social Market Foundation last June, Gavin Williamson positioned himself as the champion of Further Education and the ‘forgotten 50 percent’ who do not go to university. He promised to be the Secretary of State who would finally ensure that technical education in Britain achieved the prominence and status it deserved.
His rationale is widely shared: that ‘building back’ after the pandemic will require a sustained focus on addressing the shortages in higher technical skills which have been growing in recent years and will be amplified by Brexit. FE colleges can be – and should be – central to this endeavour, he says, and (more…)