Mrs Sheryll Murray (in the Chair) I remind Members that I would
like to leave a couple of minutes at the end for Mr Aldous to wind
up. Peter Aldous (Waveney) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered Colleges Week 2022. It is a pleasure to serve with you
in the Chair, Mrs Murray. I thank the Backbench Business Committee
for granting this debate, in which we shall consider, celebrate and
reflect on Colleges Week and the work that colleges do in
local...Request free trial
(in the Chair)
I remind Members that I would like to leave a couple of minutes
at the end for Mr Aldous to wind up.
(Waveney) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered Colleges Week 2022.
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mrs Murray. I
thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting this debate,
in which we shall consider, celebrate and reflect on Colleges
Week and the work that colleges do in local communities all over
the UK. We are actually a week late, as Colleges Week was last
week. The recent changes to the parliamentary timetable made it
impossible to secure this debate then, but that may not be a bad
thing. The debate now coincides with the appointment of a new
Prime Minister, who has already highlighted his determination to
put further education and vocational schooling at the forefront
of his Government’s work and his policies. With that in mind, I
welcome the Minister, my hon. Friend the Member for Morley and
Outwood (), to her place. I look
forward to her restating the Prime Minister’s commitment.
This is an opportune moment to not only showcase the great work
that colleges are doing, but highlight how, with the right means
and support, they can do even more to promote the communities
that they serve, deliver sustainable economic growth and help
local people to realise their dreams and achieve their ambitions.
As well as looking forward with the new Prime Minister and his
new team, it is appropriate to take stock after what has been a
hectic 18 months for colleges in policymaking terms. In January
2021, the “Skills for jobs” White Paper was published; the Skills
and Post-16 Education Act 2022 received Royal Assent earlier this
year; and colleges are now working with local employers,
councils, local enterprise partnerships and other interested
parties to put in place local skills improvement plans, or
LSIPs.
It is important to emphasise the multitasking work that colleges
are carrying out. They are driving the post-covid recovery,
supporting learners who, through no fault of their own, are
having to catch up. They are helping to deliver the net zero
economy. In my own constituency, East Coast College is in the
vanguard of promoting training for the jobs that are needed in
the offshore wind and nuclear sectors. I should point out that
this week may not be Colleges Week, but it is actually Offshore
Wind Week, and it was a pleasure to welcome local apprentices to
RenewableUK’s reception on Wednesday afternoon.
Colleges are addressing regional inequalities. Meaningful and
proper levelling up will be delivered only if the colleges are
provided with resources so that they can play their full role.
They are also promoting lifelong learning. In today’s world, a
job for life is a thing of the past. There are so many people
with so much potential with whom colleges can work to acquire the
skills to achieve their ambitions.
Finally, colleges can ensure that the economic growth we all want
is sustained and enduring—not a short-term boom followed by a
painful bust—and helps to deliver the improved productivity that
the UK so desperately needs.
(Cleethorpes) (Con)
I congratulate my hon. Friend on obtaining this important debate.
My constituency, like his, is heavily dependent on the offshore
sector from an economic point of view. I want to take the
opportunity to congratulate Peter Kennedy and his team at
Franklin Sixth Form College in Grimsby, which serves my
constituency. Would my hon. Friend agree that apprenticeship
courses in particular are vital if we are going to get our young
people into the offshore and similar sectors?
I agree wholeheartedly. Later in my speech, I will highlight some
of the strategic working that is required to make the most of the
opportunities in the offshore energy sector that are emerging not
just on the east coast, but all around the UK.
I have the privilege and honour of chairing the all-party
parliamentary group for further education and lifelong learning,
for which the Association of Colleges provides the secretariat.
It is appropriate to take stock of the work that colleges do and
the impact they have on their local communities. English colleges
educate more than 1.6 million students every year and employ
approximately 103,000 full-time equivalent staff. Some 913,000
adults study or train in colleges, while 611,000 16 to
18-year-olds study in colleges. There are 166,000 people on
apprenticeship provision in colleges, and the average college
trains 1,000 apprentices. Some 110,000 people study higher
education in a college. Some 23% of 16 to 18-year-olds and 24% of
adult students at colleges are from minority ethnic backgrounds;
21% of students in colleges have a learning difficulty and/or
disability; and 46,000 college students are aged 60 and over.
Those figures demonstrate that colleges are the Heineken of the
UK education and training system: they reach the parts and the
places that other establishments do not. They invariably do this
to a high standard, with 91% of colleges judged “good” or
“outstanding” at their most recent inspections. Colleges support
the Government’s ambitious plans to roll out T-levels, increase
apprenticeship delivery, promote adult learning and introduce
higher technical qualifications. While colleges are up for these
challenges, there are significant obstacles in the way of them
playing the role they want to—a role that will bring so many
benefits to local people and communities.
First, despite a 2021 spending review that recognised some of the
long-established funding issues facing colleges, further
education funding still compares extremely unfavourably with both
university and school funding. In its 2021 annual report on
education, the Institute for Fiscal Studies highlighted that:
“Further education colleges and sixth forms have seen the largest
falls in per-pupil funding of any sector of the education system
since 2010–11.”
Although the budget for 16 to 18-year-olds is rising for the
five-year period from 2020 to 2025, the pressures of extra
catch-up hours, increased prices and the cost of living are
holding back progress on flagship programmes in key national
skill shortage sectors. The situation is exacerbated by the
dramatic energy price increases. Some colleges have long-term
contracts with suppliers agreed in 2021, which means that they
are not covered by the six-month scheme. However, it means that
they face the prospect of treble, quadruple or even worse price
increases in 2023. It should be borne in mind that for many
technical and vocational courses, there is no good alternative to
in-person education at the college.
Secondly, colleges across the country are finding it increasingly
difficult to recruit and retain staff, given the widening gap
between what skilled teachers can earn in colleges and what they
can earn in industry or even in schools. An Association of
Colleges survey, commissioned by the Financial Times, shows that
85% of colleges reported staff shortages in construction courses,
78% in engineering and 62% in IT and computing. In August, the
AOC wrote to the then Prime Minister, my right hon. Friend the
Member for South West Norfolk (), urging her to make
investment in schools a central plank of her premiership. I hope
the Minister will confirm, following this morning’s comments
attributed to the new Prime Minister, that his Government will
make that commitment.
Thirdly and finally, colleges are concerned about the speed of
the Government’s reforms to level 3 qualifications. It is right
to have the ambition of having a respected and well-understood
set of technical qualifications in place across England. However,
it is a worry that funding for 160 existing qualifications will
be withdrawn when clear replacements are not yet in place. It
should be demonstrated that these replacements properly prepare
students for progression, meet the needs of industry and promote
social mobility. Concerns remain that T-levels will not be
accessible to all students ready to do a level 3 qualification
and that the required industry placements will not be readily
available. I urge the Minister to work with colleges and business
to address these worries, so that this flagship policy has a
positive and proper launch and does not immediately run
aground.
One of the great things about colleges is that they are
innovative, imaginative and entrepreneurial. It is in that spirit
that Stuart Rimmer, the principal of East Coast College in
Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth, has brought together colleges and
trainers from across the UK that run energy-related courses to
form the national energy skills consortium. The consortium meets
virtually three to four times a year, and I have the privilege of
being invited to those meetings. Clean energy and the low-carbon
economy provide an enormous opportunity for creating new and
exciting well-paid long-term jobs, often in deprived areas where
they are badly needed. The consortium has the objective of
maximising those opportunities and removing barriers that might
get in the way. My right hon. Friend the Member for Spelthorne
() made a presentation to the
consortium when he was Energy Minister, and my hon. Friend the
Member for Brentwood and Ongar () joined us in the summer,
when he was skills Minister. I hope the Minister will also meet
us in the near future.
In following up the meeting with the former skills Minister in
July, Stuart Rimmer highlighted three issues that must be
addressed if colleges are to properly train people to acquire the
necessary skills to work in the energy sector. First, he said it
is wrong that colleges and universities are required to take
high-risk, up-front investment decisions to build capacity and
deliver training for nationally important infrastructure
projects, such as Hinkley Point and Sizewell C. Secondly, he said
that energy and civil construction qualifications required by
employers should be brought into core funding for young people,
apprentices and adult learners. Thirdly, he said that, while
local skills improvement plans will play an important role in
ensuring that skills promotion is tailored to, and bespoke for,
local areas, it is important for the energy sector, where supply
chains often extend across the whole the UK, that a national
framework is in place. The consortium, along with the National
College for Nuclear and other bodies, such as the Engineering
Construction Industry Training Board, is keen to work with
Government to ensure that this strategic approach is pursued.
The UK desperately needs sustained economic growth that reaches
all parts of our four nations, and in which all people, whatever
their backgrounds and ages, can participate. Colleges are already
doing great work, but if they are given the resources and means,
they can do much more. Working with the Government, they can help
to put this traumatic and turbulent time behind us, and we really
can build back better.
2.05pm
(Exeter) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Murray. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Waveney () on securing this debate and
on his excellent speech. The colleges sector has in him a doughty
champion. He gave a very effective and comprehensive summary of
what colleges can achieve and how much more they can do with the
right national policies in place.
I wish to illustrate that success and potential with the story of
my local college in Exeter, which is a good example of what
colleges can do and how they can transform not just individual
people’s lives but the economic performance of a whole community.
When I was first elected, more than 25 years ago, Exeter College
was a pretty mediocre, middling kind of place. It was dilapidated
and did not have great results, and that reflected a lack of
aspiration in education in my city generally. Our high schools
were also not very good.
Over the past 25 years, that picture has been completely
transformed by some good policies, local leadership, and the
almost unique partnership and collaborative education system that
we have built in Exeter, involving the college, the university
and our high schools under the umbrella of a community-run trust
named after the great educationalist Professor Ted Wragg, who
used to run the school of education at the University of Exeter.
That led to a huge improvement in attainment and results in not
just our high schools and primary schools but our college and
university.
When I was first elected, families would send their children out
of Exeter to neighbouring schools in the countryside because they
were better and also had sixth forms. The high schools in Exeter
do not have sixth forms; most young students do their A-levels at
Exeter College. We used to haemorrhage a lot of young people into
the private sector, if the families could afford to send
them.
Today, the opposite is the case. We are attracting students from
parts of Cornwall—from your constituency, I am afraid to say, Mrs
Murray—and from Dorset and Somerset. Those young people travel
for two hours on the bus every day to Exeter and back—a four-hour
journey—to attend Exeter College. At sixth form, we are
attracting young people from private schools to Exeter College
because its results are so good and its standards so high. We are
also attracting students from outside Exeter into our high
schools because they are performing so well.
I want to give a couple of examples of the levels of achievement
that Exeter College has been hitting in recent years. This year’s
A-levels were the best ever: an astonishing 69% of students got
either A*, A or B, and 16 students secured places at Oxford or
Cambridge. Last year, Exeter College was the top college in
England for apprenticeship starts, and it has consistently bucked
the national trend of decline by increasing the number of
apprenticeships every year. Exeter College is the biggest T-level
provider in England, with results this year 4% above the national
average.
There are a few individual achievements that I would like to
highlight. Last year, the highest performing A-level PE student
in the country with one of the major awarding bodies was from
Exeter College. Given the difference between our facilities and
those of some of our leading private schools, that is an
incredible achievement. One of only four students in the country
to score top grades in digital T-levels was from Exeter College.
A female joinery apprentice from Exeter College won best in
country in the Institute of Carpenters’ national competition.
As well as those incredible academic and skills achievements, the
college also performs an important community role. Over the last
year, it has been educating 300 Ukrainian refugees, helping them
to improve their English as a foreign language. However, the
college and its excellent principal, John Laramy, would not want
me to extol its achievements without, as the hon. Member for
Waveney did, highlighting some of the challenges—for both the
college and the tertiary sector as a whole.
First, there is the issue of space. Exeter College has grown
rapidly in quite a restrictive city-centre location. It has been
regularly constrained in what it can do because of a lack of
physical space. It had to introduce 10 mobile classrooms on to
the site this summer and to pause its expansion of T-levels
because of a shortage of space. It really needs funding from the
Government’s FE transformation fund to continue to fulfil its
full potential, and I am glad that I have had the opportunity to
make that point to the Minister directly.
Secondly, there is recruitment. As the hon. Member for Waveney
said, the cost of living crisis has significantly impacted the
college’s ability to recruit qualified staff, and Brexit has also
had an effect. Although there are problems across the board, they
are particularly acute construction, digital and engineering—all
subjects in which we need to succeed as a nation if we to achieve
the growth the hon. Gentleman referred to and the improvement I
am sure we all want to see in our productivity as a nation.
I hope the Government will come forward with policies to address
some of these issues. Like the hon. Gentleman, I was very
encouraged to read the briefing in The Times today about what the
new Prime Minister would like to do with our education system.
Radical ideas are long overdue, and on the face of it the ideas
that have been put forward are very good, but this will be a big
challenge to deliver on. I would be interested to hear whether
the Minister can give us any more details in her summing up.
I will conclude by suggesting that many colleges across the
country, including Exeter College, are already doing much of what
was outlined in the No. 10 briefing in The Times today, but they
could do an awful lot more with the right policy framework, if
the staffing and skills supply issues were addressed and if the
necessary funding was in place. As the hon. Gentleman said, FE
colleges have been historically underfunded compared with
A-levels and universities. If we could tackle all those things,
we could really achieve the vision that the new Prime Minister
outlined in The Times and work together—cross-party—to do exactly
what he hopes to achieve.
2.13pm
(West Worcestershire)
(Con)
It is an honour to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon,
Mrs Murray.
I, too, congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney
() on securing this important
debate. It is a pleasure to follow the right hon. Member for
Exeter (Mr Bradshaw), because he outlined what successful
colleges can look like. I will hold to that vision as I speak
about the situation in my constituency and about the Malvern
Hills College situation in particular.
I want to start by thanking the Minister, because on taking post
she wrote me an incredibly helpful letter. She has clearly
studied the situation at the wonderful Malvern Hills College very
closely, but I will reiterate it for the record and for the
benefit of colleagues. The college has been in existence in the
centre of Malvern for nearly 100 years. In 2016, the trustees
entrusted its ownership to what has become Warwickshire College
Group, which is obviously headquartered in Warwickshire, the
neighbouring county. In their wisdom and prudence, at the time of
the transfer the trustees put in place a covenant on this
precious building in the heart of Malvern. I will read the
covenant into the record. The property cannot be used for
anything
“other than a Further Education College and ancillary uses
thereto without the prior written confirmation from the
Transferor that the Transferor is satisfied…that the Learning and
Skills Council (or any successor in function) has properly
determined that there is no longer a functional need for a
college in Malvern”.
Malvern is a beautiful town of 35,000 people. It is a growing
town. Places such as Malvern are exactly where we need to have
the precious resource of a good college—I see that colleagues are
nodding their heads. With the vision that has been outlined, and
stability in our education team, which I hope will endure, I hope
that we can focus on the fact that the community very much wishes
to retain the site as a college—so much so that, through the
Bransford Trust, a local philanthropist is offering a substantial
sum to purchase the site so that it can be maintained as a going
concern in the heart of Malvern. Our local council, Malvern Hills
District Council, has allocated a £400,000 grant to secure the
future of the college, and our county council has also very
helpfully allocated a £400,000 grant. Between them, there is a
substantial—possibly multimillion-pound—offer to keep the site
working as a college in the heart of Malvern.
Hon. Members would think that that would satisfy the board and
trustees of Warwickshire College Group—that they would remain
faithful to the covenant, the district council would not lift it,
and the college would rise like a phoenix from the closure that
Warwickshire College Group announced under the cloak of the
pandemic. Unfortunately, so far the board seems to have focused
on ensuring that it simply gets maximum value for the site and is
able to sell it—presumably, for a housing development.
That is not what the community wants. We have protested; we have
marched outside the college. We have also put forward a very
valuable offer to take the college from Warwickshire College
Group. I look forward to meeting the group’s new chair, Anna
Daroy, and its president, Louise Bennett, who are both actually
from Worcestershire, to emphasise to them how important it is to
find a happy solution.
Unfortunately—I use parliamentary privilege to make these
remarks—Warwickshire College Group has chosen to retain lawyers
and to sue Malvern Hills District Council. It is using public
money to sue my council to get it to lift the covenant, on the
pretext that the Learning and Skills Council no longer exists,
and its successor body, the Education and Skills Funding Agency,
feels that there is sufficient provision in the area. That would
mean that we as a community cannot determine the future of the
college.
I want a future for our college like the one that the right hon.
Member for Exeter outlined for his constituency. We are a
thriving town, and we want a college right in the heart of it.
That is why I have updated colleagues on what is happening. I
hope that, having listened to this tale of woe, the Minister’s
very helpful letter to her officials will say, “We do have the
power.” The Secretary of State has the power to determine that
she wants to see the college preserved in the heart of
Malvern.
I assure hon. Members that the people of Malvern almost
unanimously wish to see this wonderful college preserved. We have
a plan and a business case. While this situation goes on, the
site is being left to go to rack and ruin. That is in nobody’s
interest. Will the Minister urge her officials to look at this
issue one more time? Will she tell them that she has the power to
do something here? Power to her elbow.
2.19pm
(Motherwell and Wishaw)
(SNP)
It is an absolute pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs
Murray. I congratulate the hon. Member for Waveney () on securing this debate, even
if it is a week late.
OECD data shows that Scotland is the most educated country in the
UK and Europe. Data from 2021 shows that 55.2% of Scotland’s 25
to 65-year-olds have been through further or higher education.
That is partly due to Scottish colleges, which I was surprised to
find have a system that does not operate in England—or did not
operate the last time I looked, which was when I served on the
Education Committee here. We have a system called articulation.
It is very possible for a student to start in a college in
Scotland aged 15, perhaps—an early leaver—and study for a
national qualification, then move on to do a higher national
certificate, a higher national diploma, and sometimes go on to do
a bachelor of arts degree at that college. Alternatively, they
can choose to move on to another place—a university such as
Edinburgh Napier or Glasgow Caledonian—and go straight into their
second or third year, continuing their academic studies
there.
It is a really good system; I know, because I used to work as a
further education lecturer. I retired in 2011—that went well—but
I loved teaching in further education colleges because of the
breadth, width and variety of students. I am pretty sure that the
same happens in England. We were very involved in retraining
people who had lost jobs when major factories closed down, such
as Motorola in Livingston, where I worked. We were also heavily
involved in helping women returners; indeed, one of my proudest
achievements—if I may be so immodest—is that I helped many women
who had perhaps left school very early. In particular, I remember
one woman who was 15 when she became pregnant and left school.
She came back looking for a wee part-time course many years
later, and I put her straight on to a higher national certificate
course. She went forward, and eventually articulated to a
university and got a degree—not because of my efforts, but
because of her own.
It is always a pleasure to look back on my time in colleges, just
to reflect on the opportunities that they give our young people,
our middle-aged people and our older people. My husband went to
Motherwell College, as it was then—it has had a refresh since—and
did an access to higher education course. All our children had
gone to university, and he thought he might try it himself.
One of the most upsetting things said to me about Warwickshire
College Group’s decision to close Malvern Hills College was that
most of the students were older. Surely, that is not the kind of
message that we want to be sending out across our land.
I am appalled at that remark—not the hon. Lady’s remark, but that
being given as a reason to close down a college. No matter where
in the UK we live, lifelong learning is an extremely important
tool for every one of us. It will help the economy, but it also
gives us more satisfied and better citizens. We can all learn, no
matter what age we are; I am a continual reminder of that in my
role as disability spokesperson for my group here.
I am really pleased to be able to say that 93% of Scottish pupils
who left school last year had gone on to a positive destination,
including work, training or further study, nine months later.
Many of those pupils go on to local colleges; in fact, many
attend local colleges while they are still at school, doing
things such as foundation apprenticeships, which are a really
good start for people who are not quite so academic. When I did
my teaching qualification in further education, many years ago in
the 1990s—that is how long ago it was—I did a study of how we
deal with academic and vocational education, comparing Scotland
and Germany.
indicated assent.
I am going to leave it there, because I see the hon. Member for
Waveney nodding vociferously, but in Germany, for example,
vocational education has parity of esteem with academic
education; no part of the UK has managed that yet. It is
important for all of us that that parity of esteem should become
a reality before too long.
It would be remiss of me not to talk about widening access as
part of Colleges Week. When I was at West Lothian College—there’s
a name check—I taught disabled students and students who came
from very deprived backgrounds. To give them an opportunity was a
privilege because many of them had been told at school, “Sit at
the back of the class. You’re not going to go to university so
just sit there and don’t make a noise so we can teach these
really bright people at the front.” They arrived in college and
if I handed out a piece of work they would say, “I cannae dae
that.” That was their first reaction and, because they had been
so held back at school, for six months of any course we had to
say to them, “Yes, you are able”. At college, they blossomed.
Again, it is a privilege to watch students doing that.
I may be straying far too much into my recent history, so I will
move on and talk about my local college, New College Lanarkshire.
It has six campuses, although I hasten to add that the
best—certainly the largest—is in Motherwell in my constituency,
right on the edge of where the Ravenscraig steelworks used to be.
It is a large college and has a wide variety of courses, with
everything from a national qualification in hospitality to a BA
in music and musical theatre.
Some hon. Members may have heard of Lewis Capaldi, who is a
graduate of New College Lanarkshire and recently went back to
Motherwell to talk to people doing music courses there. I, too,
had the privilege of talking to them one day, reminiscing about
when I first heard the Beatles; I was talking to one student and
was absolutely surprised to find the whole area had stopped what
they were doing to listen to this historical monument talking
about the ’60s. The students are always winners and big
contestants in the WorldSkills UK competition—indeed, last year,
the Motherwell campus hosted the event. I take the opportunity to
thank everyone this year who is going forward.
It would be remiss of me not to talk about the people who work in
colleges. Everyone involved in colleges in my experience has been
glad to work there and be part of the journey made by students. I
have already declared that I am a former FE lecturer, but I do
not know a single FE lecturer who does not go over and above to
help their students achieve the best they possibly can.
I am pleased to have spoken in the debate. There are some issues
that the Minister could take forward in terms of the differences
in colleges in Scotland. I am always going to stand up here, when
I can and when it is true, to say that we do things better in
Scotland. We certainly get that articulation route better and we
have a slightly more positive attitude towards vocational
qualifications and their worth to the economy. If there is a
large job loss at a large company, the Scottish Government call
on local colleges to upskill and help those folk get jobs,
perhaps in another industry. That is why lifelong learning is so
important.
2.29pm
(Dulwich and West Norwood)
(Lab)
It is a great pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Murray. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Waveney () on securing the debate. He
has a long track record of advocacy for the further education and
skills sector, and he resolutely champions the cause of FE, often
in a difficult environment, with great commitment.
I want to take this opportunity to apologise on behalf of my hon.
Friend the Member for Chesterfield (Mr Perkins), who was due to
respond to the debate but is unfortunately unwell today. I know
how disappointed my hon. Friend is to miss this important
opportunity to speak up for the sector and outline Labour’s
approach, but he feared that the entire room would end up with
his very heavy cold if he were to turn up. However, I am
delighted to have the opportunity afforded by my hon. Friend’s
absence to celebrate the amazing work of colleges and I pay
tribute to Lambeth College, Southwark College and Morley College,
all of which provide a wealth of opportunities to learners from
my constituency.
As has been said, last week was Love Our Colleges Week. Every one
of us has an FE college serving our local areas, and they are
incredibly important institutions, which Labour wants to see far
better supported and utilised. We are hugely grateful to the
Association of Colleges for all the work that it does all year
round, and its Love Our Colleges Week celebrations continue to
get better and better each year.
I thank everybody who has contributed to the debate. The hon.
Member for Waveney clearly set out the breadth of provision in
colleges across the country, from post-16 qualifications to
higher education, and the vital role that colleges have in
building the skills that our economy needs for growth. My right
hon. Friend the Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) talked about the
excellent work of Exeter College and the impact that it has on
the economy of Exeter and the wider Devon area. I should also say
that Exeter College has been fortunate to have my right hon.
Friend as its champion for the past 25 years.
The hon. Member for West Worcestershire () spoke of the terrible
situation facing Malvern Hills College, and I wish her every
success with her campaign to ensure that learners in Malvern and
her wider constituency have access to the important opportunities
that the college previously provided. The hon. Member for
Motherwell and Wishaw () spoke compellingly of her
experience of teaching in further education colleges and the role
that colleges play in helping women returners. That was certainly
the experience of my mother, who was able to gain her GCSEs and
A-levels, and ultimately to graduate as an occupational
therapist, in exactly the same years that I did those same
qualifications, thanks to the provision that a local college
provided in her place of work, which was our local hospital at
the time. The hon. Lady also talked about the role that colleges
play in retraining workers who have faced redundancy, which is
important work.
Further education colleges perform amazing work across their
communities. Often colleges are the most visible places in a town
or city, and people go there if they want to learn, retrain or
improve their skills. Colleges are the brokers of second
chances—the repair shop that gets so many people on the path to a
better future. They literally change the lives and prospects of
learners in every community on every single day of the week, and
the funding cuts that they have experienced over 12 years has
been a national act of destruction. After another tough year for
our colleges, the theme of Colleges Week—staff, students and
skills—really says it all, because colleges are all about people,
with learners and staff at their centre.
The greatest advocates for our colleges are the learners
themselves. Regardless of whether they are heading towards
university or the workplace, or returning to the labour market,
learners speak volumes for the value of our FE colleges. The
learners in our colleges are inspirational. Some have had poor
experiences in formal education, others want to retrain and
change career, and some simply want to pursue a vocational path
that academia just cannot offer.
The staff in our colleges never fail to impress with their
dedication, hard work and love of the work they do. They are all
too aware of the role that they play in their local area to
support learners to get on in life, to increase in confidence and
to achieve their goals. Just this month, Labour’s shadow FE and
HE Ministers, my hon. Friends the Members for Chesterfield and
for Warwick and Leamington (), visited West Notts College
and Nottingham Trent University to learn more about the exciting
new collaborations between further and higher education
institutions and how they can offer an holistic education
experience to learners. Labour sees collaboration and working
together as the right approach for the sector after years of
market forces being allowed to dictate the direction. Neither FE
nor HE should be placed as more important than the other. A
Labour Government will facilitate partnerships that draw on the
strengths of both sectors to improve learning opportunities in
every community in the country.
Sadly, as we celebrate Colleges Week and the work of colleges,
many institutions still face uncertainty about rising energy
prices. It is vital that colleges are able to plan for the
future, and I urge the Government to end the uncertainty with
regard to spiralling energy costs.
Another issue that has faced our colleges this year has been the
Government’s obsession with axing BTECs and stripping away level
2 and level 3 qualifications. It would be helpful to get an early
steer from the new Government as to what their approach is to the
question of level 3 qualifications, because the new Secretary of
State for Education was pretty critical of BTECs when she held
the skills brief.
Labour has been proud to back the Protect Student Choice
campaign, which saw an impressive collaboration between the FE
and skills sector, businesses, student groups, and others too
numerous to mention, in their attempts to salvage BTECs, which
are held in high regard by employers. We welcomed the
Government’s U-turn on level 3 BTECs and would be grateful to
know today what the approach of this Government will be. We also
share the concerns of many in the sector regarding the axing of
valuable level 2 courses. We would be glad to know whether that
policy will be reviewed by the new Minister.
While we celebrate the achievements of colleges and their staff
and learners during this debate, we should acknowledge that the
best approach for the further education and skills sector is
collaboration and proper funding, with a well resourced further
education estate working hand in hand with employers, learners,
higher education institutions and devolved authorities in order
to deliver world-class skills. I hope that the new team at the
Department for Education heed this call. I thank all hon. Members
for their interest in this sector, and I thank every single
person working in our colleges for the life-changing work that
they do.
2.37pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education ()
It is, as always, a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mrs Murray. I start by congratulating my hon. Friend the Member
for Waveney () on securing this important
debate. I am well aware that further education colleges are an
important part of education in his constituency. There are some
great colleges doing some good work in his area, such as East
Coast College, Suffolk New College and West Suffolk College. He
mentioned our right hon. Friend the Prime Minister’s commitment
to technical and vocational qualifications. I have been saying
for some time that I want to see parity of esteem whereby
technical and vocational qualifications are held in the same high
esteem as academic qualifications, so it is music to my ears to
hear our new Prime Minister talk of this. I definitely think that
is the right direction and I fully support him in this.
My hon. Friend the Member for Waveney also touched on the
importance of apprenticeships, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Cleethorpes () did, and how important it
is that they are future-proofing our economy. We are also looking
at working with emerging industries to ensure that we can
future-proof our economy. This is certainly something that I have
been working on. My hon. Friend the Member for Waveney mentioned
how colleges reach across all sections of society; I think every
Member in this room agrees with that. They really reach out to
the hard-to-reach places.
I thought that, before beginning my main speech, I would just
touch on some of the things that hon. Members brought up. The
right hon. Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) proudly highlighted
the excellent work of his local college. I am also pleased to
hear how he is championing T-levels. I know his principal, John
Laramy, is a strong advocate for T-levels, so please pass on my
regards. The right hon. Member for Exeter discussed the
challenges of space, which I know from some of the colleges in
our local areas can be a challenge. I will happily meet with the
right hon. Member and his college principal to look at options.
As your principal is an advocate for T-levels, they have already
received £2.5 million, which is half the cost of refurbishment.
The great news is that they are successful in securing the
approval for wave 4 of T-levels; that is testament to the great
work that they are doing in that area.
I have to say to my hon. Friend the Member for West
Worcestershire (): you have been an amazing
advocate for your college. When I got this position three months
ago, yours was one of the first letters I received. I want to pay
tribute to the great work that you do in championing this.
Obviously, if legal wranglings are going on I cannot comment on
that, but I am happy to meet my hon. Friend and stakeholders to
discuss things further in person. I also pay tribute to my hon.
Friend for the amazing work that you do as chair of the APPG—
(in the Chair)
Order. The Minister is speaking through the Chair. Just a gentle
reminder.
Thank you, Mrs Murray.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for West Worcestershire for the
great work she does on the APPG on global education. I also thank
the hon. Member for Motherwell and Wishaw () for the great work she has
done in the sector. My sister worked in FE for quite a number of
years and I know the challenges, but at the same time I know how
you pull out all the stops for your students. Thank you for the
work that you do.
(in the Chair)
Order. The Minister really should not be referring to me.
Sorry. I thank the hon. Member for Motherwell and Wishaw for
discussing how important it is for us to build up strong
relationships with our devolved nations. I will work on doing
that with my counterparts. It was wonderful to hear the story of
how FE has helped one of the hon. Member’s constituents. On
T-level results day this summer, I went to a college in the
north-west. It was amazing—I wish I could bottle that enthusiasm
and spread it across the whole country. Students told me how the
T-level and being at college actually changed their lives. That
shows the great stuff that colleges do.
Colleges do fantastic work up and down the country, every single
day. I have already mentioned some of the colleges I have
visited. Darlington College had a fabulous robotics department;
Leeds College had engineering and construction. They are amazing
learning environments enabling students to flourish, get on in
life and land the jobs they have always dreamed of.
FE colleges have a role like no other education provider; they
reach parts that other education providers cannot reach. They
deliver the skills a nation needs to support growth. That could
be at level 1 or level 7. They support those who need a second
chance and those who need to reskill and retrain. They support
those who need higher-level technical skills, and they work with
schools, other providers, universities and employers. They are a
jack of all trades, and, importantly, also masters of them
all.
All that is happening in colleges up and down our country,
helping to level up the nation and support social mobility. That
is why I see colleges as engines of social mobility, encouraging
students to reach beyond what they thought was possible and smash
expectations. Colleges focus on what can be achieved by every
student who comes through the doors. As a former BTEC girl, I get
that. I will touch briefly on what the hon. Member for Dulwich
and West Norwood () said about BTECs. We need to
get on the record that we are not doing away with BTECs; we are
reforming the whole landscape to ensure that every qualification
that anybody takes leads to good outcomes for the students. That
is so important; outcome is everything for students because they
invest so much time in their education.
Can I get some clarity from the Minister on her plans for level 2
and 3 BTECs?
I will cover those points later in my speech.
My BTEC experience—I studied for a BTEC national in business and
finance—helped me on my way; importantly, I gained transferable
skills. I fully recognise that others like me—and indeed not like
me, which is a real beauty of the FE sector—will benefit from the
provision that colleges deliver, as they offer so much in our
communities, to our students and to our economy.
With the recognition of the value and worth of colleges comes the
need to ensure that they are properly funded, which is why
throughout this Parliament we have sought to substantially
increase investment in post-16 education. We are investing: £3.8
billion more in FE and skills over this Parliament, including an
extra £1.6 billion for 16-to-19 education in 2024-25; an extra
£500 million for T-levels, when they are fully rolled out; £1.34
billion in adult education and skills through the adult education
budget in 2022-23; and £2.5 billion over the course of the
Parliament for the national skills fund to support eligible
adults to upskill and reskill. We are also increasing
apprenticeship funding to £2.7 billion by 2024-25.
We are also investing in facilities, as I mentioned earlier, with
£2.8 billion in capital investment to improve the college
estates, and over £400 million to ensure that they have the
facilities and equipment needed for T-levels. We have big
ambitions for colleges and the whole further education sector,
but we cannot shy away from the challenges, which I know some
hon. Members have mentioned.
Rising costs and the energy crisis are hitting everyone. Colleges
are certainly no exception. The investments that I have outlined
will help to support the sector to deliver on its ambitions
against this backdrop. The energy relief scheme that the
Government announced only last month will be a much needed help
for colleges. We are working continually with the sector, and I
have asked colleges to let us know about their cost pressures, so
we can consider that in determining the next steps. I will listen
carefully in order to fully understand the challenges and
opportunities that the sector faces, and to understand the
challenges that colleges face. We ask a lot of them, but we know
that they can deliver what learners, businesses and the country
needs. The whole nation needs to be thankful for what colleges
do.
Regarding skills reforms, colleges play an important role in our
ambition to develop one of the best technical education systems
in the world. I am pleased to hear that the Opposition are on the
same page as us. We value the importance of technical education,
so it is great that we are in government and delivering on this.
We are investing in the skills system so that colleges have the
means and support to offer learners the chance to retrain,
upskill and reskill anywhere in the country, so that they can get
good jobs wherever they live.
Since the publication of the “Skills for jobs” White Paper in
2021, we have been working closely with colleges to improve
courses and qualifications to ensure we are focused on giving
people the skills they need to get into great jobs. Colleges have
been pivotal in the delivery of new, high-quality provision, and
we thank them for all their hard work these past few years in
rolling out this significant reform programme.
Successive reviews, including the Wolf review and the Sainsbury
review, have found that the current qualifications system is
overly complex and does not serve students or employers well.
This is why we have undertaken a series of reviews of academic
and technical qualifications at level 3, level 2 and below. As I
said earlier, this is about outcomes for students. The reviews
will ensure that every funded qualification has a clear purpose,
is high-quality and will lead to good outcomes for students. We
have already removed funding approval for over 5,000
qualifications that have low, or no, publicly funded enrolments
at level 3. That is the right move. Although we want momentum, we
want to introduce these reforms at a manageable pace, given the
extent of change in the wider qualification landscape, including
at level 3.
Let me turn to higher level technical education. Many colleges
are already delivering excellent higher technical education, yet
uptake of these courses is low compared to other levels of study
internationally and previous figures in England, despite strong
employer demand for higher technical skills. We are therefore
delivering supply and demand-style reforms to grow uptake of
high-quality higher technical education. Our reforms are focused
on quality, to lay foundations for the long-term sustainable
growth of higher technical qualifications.
My hon. Friend the Member for Waveney mentioned local skills
improvement plans. Employer representative bodies have been
appointed to lead on the development of local skills improvement
plans in all areas of the country. That includes the Norfolk
chamber of commerce, which is leading on the LSIPs across Norfolk
and Suffolk, including in my hon. Friend’s constituency.
We have moved quickly since launching LSIPs in the “Skills for
jobs” White Paper in January 2021. We piloted the plans and the
development fund to see what worked well, legislated to put LSIPs
on a statutory footing, and ran competitions to find the
strongest employer bodies to lead on developing each employer-led
plan. LSIPs place employers at the heart of our local skills,
facilitating more dynamic working arrangements between employers,
colleges and other training providers. Together with the
strategic development fund, which supports providers to make
changes to their curriculum, LSIPs make technical education more
responsive to employers’ needs.
I know that the sector is facing challenges with the recruitment
and retention of teachers; that is one of the main things that
colleges around the country tell me. I recognise that great
teachers are fundamental to the success of our skills system,
which is why our “Skills for jobs” White Paper sets out our
continuing support for the FE sector to recruit and train great
teachers. We will support the sector through the national
recruitment campaign programmes to recruit industry professionals
into FE teaching roles, and upskill FE teachers to deliver new
T-levels by improving the quality of FE initial teacher training
education.
Let me turn to the Office for National Statistics
reclassification. I appreciate that there are some concerns in
the sector about this work, but we are continuing to work closely
with the sector, and will provide information and guidance for
providers in the event of a reclassification. We will ensure that
any changes are managed smoothly, and that all in the sector are
kept fully up to date at all stages so that providers can
continue to deliver the best provision for learners. It is
important to recognise that this is the moment that the FE sector
remains classified as part of the private sector, and colleges
should continue to operate as usual.
Most providers are doing a brilliant job of transforming the
lives of people in their community, but our funding system does
not always help them to do so. We want to change this and ensure
that the system actively supports FE providers to work
collaboratively with local providers, employers and other key
stakeholders. Our reforms to funding and accountability for
colleges will help us to ensure that colleges are better
supported to focus on helping their students into good jobs. We
have reduced the complexity of funding so that colleges can focus
on their core role of education and training, and define clearer
roles and responsibilities for the key players in the
systems.
We want to build a world-class further education system that
delivers for the whole nation. A key part of this is ensuring
that colleges are fit for the future, with better facilities and
great buildings. That is why, through the FE capital
transformation programme, we are investing £1.5 billion over six
years between 2020 and 2026 to upgrade and transform the FE
college estate.
I am particularly proud of our skills bootcamps, and I pay
tribute to colleges for the way in which they have embraced them,
as one of the newest programmes. I visited a skills bootcamp on
heavy goods vehicle driving, and I got to drive one of the big
trucks myself. I saw a few people looking scared when I got
behind the wheel, but I managed not to crash it, thankfully; it
was amazing. I met a young chap with severe mental health
problems, who was a real champion for a men’s mental health
charity that helps with suicide prevention. He said that
retraining through the skills bootcamp gave him a new lease of
life.
Skills bootcamps have the potential to transform the skills
landscape by helping local regions and employers to fill
in-demand vacancies, and are an important block in the
foundations of our skills reforms. I am therefore delighted that
colleges are playing an integral part in supporting their
delivery in local areas. They are helping to fulfil the aims of
the programme by providing opportunities to adults and plugging
the skills gaps. Funding for skills bootcamps from the last
spending review will enable us to continue to grow that offer
significantly with support from colleges. That will help tens of
thousands of adults across the country to gain new skills.
We touched briefly on T-levels. We got off to a great start: our
first cohort of T-levels achieved an impressive overall rate of
92.2%. I am a real advocate of them, because they are great for
social mobility. Middle-class families can get work experience,
internships and so on through their connections, but those from
disadvantaged areas find it much more difficult to get work
experience. It is excellent for young students to get that on
their CV, as it helps them to climb the ladder and go on to a
great career.
It is clear that the great work of providers such as colleges is
setting students up for successful careers and equipping them
with the skills the country needs. The numbers of T-level
providers and students are increasing quickly, and we are
confident that that will continue. In 2021 alone, 5,450 people
took up T-levels. Students tell us that they favour these
courses, especially when they have industry placements.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney for securing this
debate, and for supporting and promoting the sector. I also thank
other Members for their equally valuable input. The debate has
made it clear that FE colleges are held in high regard throughout
the land. The Government and I believe colleges are important,
and that is backed up by serious investment. This debate has not
changed my position; I am even more convinced of it after hearing
the great things that hon. Members have said about the FE
sector.
I was impressed and moved by the points that hon. Members made
about the colleges in their constituencies and the great work
that their constituents do. I have already said that the
Government value the importance, impact and value of the FE
sector, and our policies and investment back that up. I am
honoured to be the Minister with responsibility for further
education colleges. Hon. Members can rest assured that I will
continue to be their champion.
2.58pm
We have had a very good debate. Perhaps it would have been
greater if more Members were here, but we have the graveyard slot
on a Thursday afternoon.
I want to highlight some of the issues that Members raised. The
right hon. Member for Exeter (Mr Bradshaw) and my hon. Friend the
Member for West Worcestershire () spoke about the good and
bad that colleges can do. It is clear that Exeter is a long way
advanced on a path that I hope my constituency goes down too. The
right hon. Member for Exeter and I both represent coastal
communities, and coastal communities have real challenges right
through the education system. In Exeter, the college has come
together with a very high-quality higher education institution
and has worked with the primary and secondary schools to raise
standards across the board and create a centre for excellence. We
can all learn from that.
Then we heard about the—dare I say it?—tragedy of what is
happening in the Malvern Hills. When it comes to regeneration,
levelling up and ensuring that the whole country can participate
in the proceeds of growth, there is a hole in the heart of the
Malvern Hills, because they will not have that opportunity.
We all talk about levelling up and want to show how our
particular constituencies can benefit. We probably all—I am the
worst example of this—want shiny new edifices. We want roads,
railways and bridges—I have a great bridge coming—and we need to
build them as a catalyst for growth, but ultimately it is the
investment in flesh and blood, rather than concrete and steel,
that will ensure meaningful and long-term growth. That is what
colleges have to offer. All 650 MPs have a college in or within
striking distance of their constituency, and colleges will be the
engine of regeneration. The Government should be commended for
bringing in reforms and recognising the importance of the sector,
but they need to take the sector with them and work with it.
There is sometimes an anxiety about the speed of travel.
The debate on the Skills and Post-16 Education Act, which took
place across both Chambers in the last Session, was a good one.
My slight regret is that it was a real opportunity to make a
landmark Act and we did not quite grasp that. Perhaps some of the
amendments that were tabled in the other place, which probably
had that intention in mind, should have been taken on board.
LSIPs have enormous potential and, as the Minister said, put
employers at the heart of these reforms. However, if the
employer, who is in the driving seat, kicks out the other
partners—the colleges, universities, local enterprise
partnerships, mayors or councils—that car will quickly go off the
cliff, so they need to be collegiate with colleges when playing
their role. In my own area in Norfolk and Suffolk, that is indeed
what is happening.
Staffing is a challenge. Look at what is happening in East Anglia
with the opportunities in offshore wind and in nuclear at
Sizewell. It is a real challenge to getting teachers and trainers
with skills in fabrication and the other expertise we need. The
Government must focus on that and employers must also play their
role.
I will finish on the matter of funding. As a Conservative, we
probably overlooked the sector for much of the past decade. In
2021, we woke up to that, and the spending review was largely
positive as far as FE is concerned, but it is not the end of the
journey; it is the very beginning.
In the next 10 days, some important decisions will be made. The
Government will have to make tough choices, but they should be
very cautious about making cuts to the sector. It seems like a
long time ago now, but we had that growth plan in September. We
all want growth, but it needs to be sustained and its proceeds
available for everyone to participate in. In my constituency,
very few people earn in excess of £150,000, but we want everyone
to be able to participate in the proceeds of growth, and
investing in our FE colleges enables us to do that and enhances
social mobility.
When we achieve growth, it should not just be a quick boom to
coincide with the electoral cycle, followed by a bust. It should
be sustained and gradual growth that everyone can participate in.
That is the role that colleges can play. I hope that today we
have made an important contribution to ensuring that that can
happen.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered Colleges Week 2022.
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