Tony Vaughan (Folkestone and Hythe) (Lab) I beg to move, That this
House has considered the matter of tackling barriers to educational
opportunities. It is a privilege to serve under your chairship, Mr
Pritchard. In the UK today, most 18-year-olds—around 64%—do not go
to university. I want to focus on the barriers facing the 64% of
young people in accessing the education and training that they need
to lead fulfilling working lives. I do not believe that...Request free trial
(Folkestone and Hythe)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling barriers to
educational opportunities.
It is a privilege to serve under your chairship, Mr
Pritchard.
In the UK today, most 18-year-olds—around 64%—do not go to
university. I want to focus on the barriers facing the 64% of
young people in accessing the education and training that they
need to lead fulfilling working lives. I do not believe that they
have benefited from the same educational opportunities as the
minority of young people who leave school for university, and
that makes no moral, social or economic sense. In my view, our
system of vocational education and training is not working for
the 64%, or for our country.
My constituency of Folkestone and Hythe has incredible potential
for a thriving vocational education and training system. It has
strengths in the creative industries, independent retail, tourism
and hospitality, as well as green energy and nuclear
decommissioning. We are home to the Little Cheyne Court wind farm
and the former Dungeness nuclear power station. However, the
potential for a technical education system to supply those
industries, and others, with skilled workers in both Folkestone
and Hythe and the UK as a whole remains untapped. In 2022-23,
there were 677 apprenticeship starts in Folkestone and Hythe, but
only five in the leisure, tourism and travel sector, despite the
size of that sector. And despite the significant number of
regeneration projects in Folkestone and Hythe, the number of
apprenticeship starts in construction, planning and the built
environment fell by 49% in 2022-23 compared with the previous
year.
Our country has some incredible further education colleges; I
commend the work of East Kent college in Folkestone. When I
visited during the general election campaign, I was shown
workshops, kitchens and classrooms where, among many other
vocations, the builders, electricians, carpenters, programmers,
chefs and healthcare workers of the future are being educated.
The college, which was judged to be “outstanding” by Ofsted in
2023, offers an incredible range of qualifications, including
BTecs and T-levels. It offers adult education and there is also a
junior college, with a two-year creative curriculum for learners
aged 14 and over who want to specialise in arts or business
studies. I thank its staff and students for their hard work, and
for the grilling that they gave me and the other candidates at a
hustings event hosted by the college before the election.
Unfortunately, in many colleges like East Kent college, not all
students who complete courses in specialist areas actually go on
to work in those fields. That is not always down to students
changing their minds; it is also because of the lack of jobs and
apprenticeships available in the labour market. Under 14 years of
Conservative Governments, apprenticeships starts plummeted, the
apprenticeship levy was exposed as inadequate and further
education was starved of vital funds. In 2015-16, the total
number of apprenticeship starts was 509,000; by 2022-23, that
number had fallen to 337,000. Between 2017 and 2024, the number
of engineering apprenticeship starts fell by 42%. It was
encouraging to see that apprenticeship starts grew by 3% in the
month Labour took office, demonstrating employers' optimism
following the change of Government.
I am afraid to say that the Conservatives' reforms, such as the
apprenticeship levy and T-levels, were ineffective. There was not
enough flexibility built into the apprenticeship levy and not
enough investment in apprenticeships for younger learners. As the
chief executive officer of Make UK, Stephen Phipson, has said,
successive Governments have provided inadequate funding for
engineering apprenticeships, rendering them uneconomical for FE
colleges and private providers to deliver. Neither have we had
proper alignment between our industrial and our vocational
education strategies.
As a result, our skills policy has not been supporting the
sectors of our economy we most need to grow. Sectors such as
battery technology, electrical vehicle production and renewable
technology manufacturing do not receive the funding for
apprenticeships that they need, and in turn do not benefit from a
steady supply of skilled workers. We need to end the mismatch
between what is taught and the skills needed by the labour
market. I warmly welcome the Government's agenda for skills and
vocational education and the Budget announcement of an additional
£300 million funding boost for further education next year. But
we know that in this policy area, as in so many others, funding
is not enough—ambitious reform is what we need.
I will touch on three aspects of the Government skills policy:
Skills England, devolution and reform of the apprenticeship levy.
I support the creation of Skills England, which will end the
fractured skills landscape and bring together combined
authorities, businesses, workers, trade unions and colleges so
that there is co-ordination to meet local economies' skills
needs. It is incredibly important that Skills England will be a
strategic body so that it can make sure that our industrial
strategy, Invest 2035, and the vocational educational strategy
work as one. Only then will sectors such as advanced
manufacturing, which is rightly a focus of our Invest 2035 plan,
benefit from a predictable supply of skilled labour.
I also support the fact that part of Skills England's mandate
will be to collaborate with the Migration Advisory Committee so
that we ensure that our own young talent is trained up and joins
our labour market before we reach out to recruit from abroad. We
have an abundance of young talent. This is about ensuring that
our skills policy makes the most of the talent, work ethic and
creativity of our young people while having an immigration system
that welcomes the workers we need to get our economy growing and
our public services working again. The Migration Advisory
Committee has for far too long looked at labour market shortages
in a vacuum without thinking about how our skills policy can
address those shortages in the long term.
I also believe that it is important for more powers over skills
and technical education to be devolved, because the UK still has
variation in our regional economies. For example, the creative
industries are very important in Folkestone and Hythe, and
nationally that sector contributed £124 billion to the UK economy
in '22. In the west midlands, the automotive sector is important.
On Teesside, there is a resilient chemical sector, and there is
still a proud steel industry in Scunthorpe and Port Talbot.
Different regional economies will demand different focuses and
priorities for policymakers, so I endorse the Government's plan
to ensure that there are local skills improvement plans and that
adult skills funding will be devolved to combined
authorities.
Reform of the apprenticeship levy is long overdue. The levy is a
tax on employers with a wage bill of over £3 million a year that
funds apprenticeships. The problem is that the funds levied can
be spent only on very specific types of training. For example,
businesses cannot use the money to fund any courses shorter than
one year. The new growth and skills levy will be critical,
because it will mean that businesses will be able to pay for a
greater range of training options, apprentices will have more
choice and apprenticeships can be shorter than a year. It is very
important that employers will be required to fund more of their
level 7—that is, master's degree-level—apprenticeships. The money
saved there will be reinvested into foundation apprenticeships,
which will give younger workers more opportunity and
flexibility.
I know that the road ahead is challenging. Between 2017 and 2022,
the number of skills shortages in the UK doubled to more than
half a million, and by 2022 skills shortages accounted for 36% of
job vacancies. Training expenditure is also at its lowest level
since records began in 2011. Yet if we get skills policy right,
the opportunities are huge. Total revenue from the apprenticeship
levy is forecast to grow from £3.9 billion to £4.6 billion by
2029 due to rising wages. A broader skills base will mean more
productive jobs, higher labour productivity, stronger wage growth
and rising living standards for all workers, not just
university-educated professionals. That will benefit young
people, many of whom feel demotivated and disenfranchised and
believe that the 21st century economy does not serve them. In
places where they have been given a pound shop instead of a
workshop, they may be right.
On future policy development, can the Minister provide more
detail on the timeline for when we can expect the different
phases of development of Skills England? I would also be grateful
to know how the Government plan to align Invest 2035 with their
post-16 education strategy. Both those strategies require
prioritisation, so what sectors do the Government plan to focus
on to drive up the number of apprenticeship starts? Are there any
other areas of education and skills policy that the Government
would like to devolve to local economies rather than combined
authorities? For example, there is no combined authority in Kent.
What plans do the Government have to ensure more apprenticeship
starts in the industries of the future, such as artificial
intelligence, autonomous vehicles, green energy and new
nuclear?
(Glastonbury and Somerton)
(LD)
I thank the hon. Member for securing this important debate.
Somerset is home to Agratas, which is a 40 GWh gigafactory at the
Gravity Smart Campus. It is creating jobs and boosting the green
economy. It is important that local people in Somerset have the
skills to work in those jobs, so does the hon. Member agree that
we should encourage local partnerships between schools and
industry to teach science, technology, engineering and maths
skills and offer those opportunities?
The hon. Member is absolutely right, and that is exactly what
Skills England is going to do. It is about the collaboration
between all the different stakeholders in society, not just
businesses and colleges, to enable us to get to a point where the
skills need is being facilitated by education providers.
A high quality vocational education system will improve social
mobility, and be one of the best ways to tackle the precarity of
the low skill, low productivity and low pay economies that have
been built over the last 14 years. I look forward to working with
the Government to break down the barriers to opportunity for the
64% of young people who do not go to university, and to build a
vocational training system that we can all be proud of.
Several hon. Members rose—
(in the Chair)
Order. The debate is very popular and oversubscribed; over 17
Members want to speak. To get everybody in, I am afraid that I
will be imposing a time limit of two and a half minutes. I call
, who I am sure will set a great
example.
2.42pm
(Caithness, Sutherland and
Easter Ross) (LD)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Pritchard. I congratulate the hon. Member for Folkestone and
Hythe () on a most interesting
speech.
If one visits the Scottish Parliament—some Members may have done
or may in future—one cannot help but admire the woodwork. The
joinery, carpentry and cabinetmaking are of the highest standard.
I was on the Committee that oversaw the building of that
Parliament—it nearly cost me my seat in the 2003 Scottish
election, but that is beside the point. What struck me very
forcibly was that in the United Kingdom we did not have the
cabinetmaking and joinery skills to produce a finished article of
that quality. Most of the work was done by people from Romania,
Poland and other eastern European countries. My point is that
when skills disappear, they can sometimes disappear forever.
I worked as a young man at a yard in Wester Ross called Kishorn,
where the mighty Ninian Central Platform for the North sea was
built. I worked at Nigg, where a number of the hard steel jackets
were constructed. At the highpoint of Nigg in the early 1980s,
some 5,000 people worked there. They were highly skilled: they
were trained in welding, fabrication and all manner of supporting
disciplines to achieve some of the greatest structures ever built
for the North sea. Today, many of those people are retired or
nearly at retirement age, and my big worry—this echoes the point
made by the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe—is that although
those people could pass on the skills and train young people in
them, there is no effort to make that happen. We could be faced
with a parallel to the situation I described at the Scottish
Parliament: skills could disappear.
I am heartened by the news from Hull that turbine blades are
going to be constructed there. That is good news and the Prime
Minister was quite correct to emphasise that today. The point is
that we should be making far more floating offshore structures in
the United Kingdom—the cells, the blades and the towers
themselves. While we have the fabrication skills in different
parts of the UK, including in my constituency in Scotland, we
should get that business going again and be training up the next
generation.
In the past, there was an organisation called the Highlands and
Islands Development Board. Under the management of the Scottish
Government, it has been left to become almost nothing. I am sorry
that no SNP Members are here to hear that. They should get up and
sort it out, because if that is not reactivated, we are in dead
trouble.
2.45pm
(Glasgow East) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Pritchard. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe () for securing this important
debate and for his compelling and comprehensive survey of adult
education.
For centuries, Scotland had one of the best education systems in
the world, but that is not the case today under the Scottish
National party. Attainment has been falling for years. As recent
programme for international student assessment reviews show,
standards in literacy, mathematics and science are falling, and
that is closing doors for children and young people in my seat.
The response in Glasgow, I am afraid, has been to cut 172
teaching posts this year, with further cuts to come.
The attainment gap in Scottish schools is widening. Where someone
is born is becoming more, not less, important than it was and
barriers for poorer children are increasing. It is worth saying
that the Government are tackling one of the causes of the
attainment gap—poverty—by introducing legislation that will make
work pay and tackling family poverty by increasing the national
minimum and living wage. However, the SNP is also responsible for
the attainment gap in our schools and that is preventing young
people from getting good jobs and being able to provide for their
families.
A simple example of that failure is that since 2010, there has
been a material drop in school attendance. If someone does not go
to school, they do not learn. There has also been a general
worsening of behaviour in Scottish schools since 2016, shown by
figures from the Scottish Government themselves. Put simply, in
many Scottish schools, parents, children and teachers have great
fear and worry about school behaviour. made it clear that closing
the attainment gap was her main objective, but the SNP has failed
on that.
Adult education, which my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone
and Hythe spoke so compellingly about, is critical for jobs for
people in Scotland. The OECD recently carried out a study of
Scottish adult education and other matters in the west coast of
Scotland, where my seat is located. It reported that career
guidance for adults is “challenging to access” and financial
incentives to invest in reskilling and upskilling workers are
very low. That has a terrible impact on low-paid workers in
Scotland and a real impact on both economic growth in Scotland
and such critical matters as the transition from oil and gas to
renewables.
With six seconds to go, I will conclude by saying that elections
take place in Holyrood in 2026. It is time for change and a
Government that put education first.
2.47pm
(East Hampshire) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I commend the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe () for securing this
broad-ranging debate on barriers to education opportunities.
There are many things that we could talk about, but in 150
seconds I will restrict myself to three things.
The first is about free school meals. Labour Members said some
pretty terrible things in 2018 about what we would do to
eligibility for free school meals. It did not happen. In reality,
the number of children eligible has risen from about one in six
in 2010 to one in three most recently, and that is despite
employment, the number of children growing up in workless
households and the number of people in work and on low pay having
come right down. What will the Government do to keep entitlement
at around the same level as now even after universal credit
roll-out has concluded?
Secondly, I want to ask about the holiday activities and food
programme, which has been successful for young people. I am sure
the new Government would not dream of cutting it, but a lot of
local areas—I know that one in Yorkshire has been discussing the
matter very recently—want some reassurance and some forward
visibility about what will happen with the HAF programme after
the end of this year.
Finally, I wanted to ask about breakfast clubs. The Government
have talked a great deal about primary school breakfast clubs and
people are quite disappointed about the scale of what they have
heard so far. The total percentage of primary schools in England
covered by the first phase is, I think, 4.5%. They also talk
about breakfast clubs as if they were something novel, whereas in
reality there are thousands in schools across the country
already. So when they say they need to move slowly because they
need to have a pilot, what does the Minister think needs to be
piloted? Is it the type of bowl or the angle of pour of the
cornflakes, or is it just that they are trying slow down the
roll-outs?
Most importantly, I want to ask about secondary schools and
special schools. Among the thousands of breakfast clubs,
including those supported by the national school breakfast
programme, are those in secondary schools and special schools. If
we are talking about impacting something like attendance, we can
have more of an impact with breakfast clubs at secondary school.
Again, I am sure that the Government will not think about cutting
that programme—it would be unthinkable to do so—but what will
they do? When will they give visibility to secondary schools and
special schools about how they will grow the support for
breakfast clubs in schools in the future?
2.50pm
(Portsmouth North) (Lab)
Thank you, Mr Pritchard, for your chairmanship. One of the many
legacies of the previous Government is a crisis in education and
overwhelming barriers to opportunity for young people. Those
barriers do not diminish with age, as gaining new skills is
difficult in a country where employer investment in training and
development has fallen by a third
The UK economy is facing a severe skills shortage. Over the next
decade, we will need 350,000 construction apprenticeships, 1.3
million skilled tradespeople and 130 naval nuclear roles.
However, apprenticeships have started to decline sharply in
recent years, highlighting the need for a focus on them. First,
we want to create more opportunities for apprenticeships. Despite
a chronic skills gap, for every apprenticeship, there are three
applications. We need to restore financial incentives to small
and medium-sized enterprises to take on apprenticeships, make the
apprenticeship funding model more transparent, and get into our
communities and showcase to children, young people and parents
the opportunities that are out there. We need to increase
financial support for the apprenticeship rate; it is set at £6.40
at the moment and that is just not enough to survive on. We need
to expand foundational apprenticeships and introduce shorter
apprenticeships for those who cannot afford the 12 months, and we
have to simplify the system and increase the flexibility.
Secondly, it is vital that we value all pathways. The toxic
legacy of the Tories in education and the undervaluing of certain
subjects—from vocational courses to the arts and social
sciences—have meant a loss in those areas. Inspiring young people
into diverse sectors is vital, and many young people and their
parents do not see trade careers as an option. We must boost
careers advice and awareness of apprenticeships. We must use the
growth and skills levy, with which the spending of levy money on
accessing outreach should be permitted. Careers advice must also
highlight the range of training provisions.
Finally, we must bring local people into those opportunities. In
my constituency, 8.8% of people are on minimum wage. We have
good-quality jobs in industry and technology, as well as naval
and maritime opportunities, but they are not being accessed by
local people. I believe that if we cannot see it, we cannot do
it. We must open up those opportunities to local people, whether
they are children or people who want to change career, with
outreach into their local communities. In short, we need to
overhaul the system and provide equalised, valued places, and we
must ensure that local people have access to them.
2.52pm
(Chichester) (LD)
Thank you, Mr Pritchard, for your chairmanship. I wish to
contribute to this debate by talking about education
opportunities that are close to my heart in the creative
industries, and the barriers in this country to a creative
education. I come to this place as a proud graduate of University
of Chichester in my constituency, and I am living proof that a
creative qualification can lead someone down many paths,
including to this place.
Years of underfunding and poor organisation means that, despite a
booming creative industry in the UK, young people are finding it
increasingly difficult to attain the education they need to enter
the sector, especially through the state system. There has been a
significant drop in arts enrolment at A-level, with a 29% decline
since 2010. Government grants for arts education have fallen 40%
in real terms over the past decade, and the number of those
teaching arts-based subjects dropped by 27% between 2011 and
2024.
I refer Members to my entry in the Register of Members' Interests
as a trustee of Chichester Festival Theatre, which has a thriving
learning, education and participation department, and it is
leading the way in giving access to performing arts education to
those from underprivileged backgrounds. Pallant House Gallery
also has a fantastic education and outreach department, and both
Chichester College and the University of Chichester are creating
the next generation of creatives who will feed into a creative
industry, which the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe () mentioned, is worth £126
billion to the economy and creates 2.4 million jobs.
The work that charities and organisations are doing in this space
to reduce barriers to opportunity is immeasurable, and their work
is at risk if local authorities are not appropriately funded to
ensure that their non-statutory obligations are protected. The
nature of the English baccalaureate means that it restricts
take-up of the creative subjects and adds additional barriers to
artistic education, which is why the Liberal Democrats are
committed to including arts within it and ensuring Ofsted
monitors schools so they provide a broad curriculum, including
arts, with links to the creative and digital sectors. That would
encourage young people to continue with an arts-based
qualification, which is shown to be beneficial to their mental
health. It would also improve results in subjects such as English
and maths, and attainment in education as a whole.
The UK arts and creative industries are crucial to the UK economy
and cultural identity, so there should be no barriers to the
educational opportunities the sector can bring. I look forward to
hearing the Minister commit to recognising the importance of a
creative education.
2.55pm
Sarah (Hyndburn) (Lab)
Thank you, Mr Pritchard, for your chairmanship. I thank my hon.
Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe () for securing this very
important debate.
I first got involved in politics because I thought it wrong that,
far too often, the postcode in which a person is born dictates
their life outcomes. I have spent the past 17 years working with
some of the charities that the hon. Member for Chichester () mentioned to tackle
that disadvantage gap. I am incredibly honoured to be the
national champion for the opportunity mission, because I believe
that the most important element of this Government's priorities
is to break down barriers to opportunity and ensure that a child
growing up in Clayton-le-Moors in my constituency of Hyndburn has
exactly the same opportunities as a child growing up in
Chelsea.
I will focus on the issues that we must tackle in the special
educational needs and disabilities system, particularly for
children and young people who grow up with SEND, but I first want
to highlight the absolutely catastrophic situation that we
inherited. Sadly, across the country, 20% of children grow up in
poverty, but in my constituency of Hyndburn it is 37%. The data
is stark. The Institute for Fiscal Studies demonstrates that the
earnings of boys who grow up in the most affluent households are
19 percentile points higher than those of boys from the most
disadvantaged households, and for girls it is a 27 percentile
point difference.
I strongly believe that a strong state education system is the
key to overcoming that disparity, so I welcome the significant
£1.4 billion schools rebuilding programme and the £2.1 billion we
are investing in the repairs fund. That will have a direct impact
in my constituency on Altham St James school, Knuzden St Oswald's
school, the Hyndburn academy and Haslingden high school.
My inbox is filled with messages from parents who are desperately
fighting the education, health and care plan system. I have to
write to the head of SEND at the borough council more than to any
other stakeholder. Just this week, a constituent told me that she
has been waiting over a year for a copy of her daughter's EHCP,
after an emergency review hearing. In the meantime, her daughter
is out of education, just before her GCSEs and transition to
college.
I am conscious of time, but I have some questions for the
Minister. The attention on SEND provision across educational
settings is welcome, but will she tell us a bit more about how
the Government will approach that? When can we expect the
children's wellbeing Bill?
2.58pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Pritchard. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe () on securing the debate and
setting the scene. I thank him for being here and giving us all
an opportunity to participate.
I have two helpful suggestions for the Minister. If things we
have done in Northern Ireland have been successful, I want to
share them and tell others about them. In Northern Ireland, the
Minister of Education, my DUP colleague , has acknowledged that there are
barriers and has implemented a new scheme called the RAISE
programme. That it is an important opportunity to look afresh at
the issues caused by deprivation and drive forward the whole
community. It is a place-based approach to remove the barriers to
learning and educational achievement. That is important to us
because in Northern Ireland, young, white Protestant boys are not
achieving their goals. The Government and the Education Minister
recognise that and have set about trying to address it. The
Education Minister said:
“My department will now continue to engage with key stakeholders
in each RAISE locality through a series of workshops over the
coming weeks and months—to identify needs, build the evidence
base and bring forward strategic plans for consideration.”
I know the Minister here is always keen to participate. Has she
had the opportunity to discuss that programme with Minister
Givan, as she might wish to put it in place here too?
I want to reflect on one of the most effective residents'
associations in Strangford. The Scrabo Residents' Association has
a project to build up the confidence of young men within
communities, so that they will understand that they can find a
job, break the cycle within their family and have pride going to
their job. I have met some of those young men; their pride in
what they can do is excellent to see.
Government have made funding available for some residents' groups
to do such projects on the ground, thereby giving people jobs.
Success stories include HGV driving, and work in factories and in
fields. Will the Minister consider some of the things we have
done in Northern Ireland, such as the Raise programme and
projects that we are pursuing with community groups? With those
we can add value, and add value to the local community at the
same time.3.00pm
Mr (Leeds South West and Morley)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Pritchard. I
start by thanking my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and
Hythe () for securing the debate.
My experience as a maths teacher at a secondary school taught me
about the barriers to opportunity that students face. As I have
highlighted these issues many times and will continue to do so as
a member of the Education Committee, I want to focus today on the
lack of support for young carers, primarily because that has been
raised by my constituents.
A recent report by the Carers Trust highlights the issues. It
spoke to almost 25,000 pupils and 65 young carer services for the
report, which highlighted three main concerns. First, caring can
have a significant negative impact on education, opportunity and
attendance. In 2022-23, young carers on average missed more than
a month of their education, which was nine days more than their
classmates who were not carers. The report also found that, in
England, almost a half of young carers were persistently absent
from secondary school that year.
The second area of concern was that many young carers are not
spotted or recognised while they are in education. Only a quarter
of the respondents to the survey agreed that teachers had a good
understanding of their challenges. Although many local young
carer services are promoting awareness-raising campaigns, only a
third of them said that they had the capacity to give education
providers the help they need to identify young carers. The third
area highlighted in the report was the inconsistency of support
offered to young carers in education. Almost one in four young
carers stated that there was no support for them in their
college, school or university.
What can we do to tackle that? There are two things I would like
to ask the Minister to consider. First, to consider adding young
carers to the Department for Education's daily attendance
reporting scheme. That will help to inform schools and local
authorities about the young carers who are missing from school
and their level of attendance. Secondly, I ask the Minister to
consider introducing a young carers' pupil premium. That would
ensure that schools had the funding they need to support all the
young carers in their educational institutions. In conclusion, I
am very keen to support young carers in our community.
3.03pm
(Great Grimsby and
Cleethorpes) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon,
Mr Pritchard. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Folkestone and Hythe () on securing this important
debate.
I want to take the opportunity to highlight an issue that affects
the future of many children in our communities—the barriers to
educational opportunities faced by children in kinship care. In
my constituency, 450 children are living in kinship care, placing
us in the top 10% in England and Wales. Those children being
raised by relatives or close family friends often face
significant challenges that can hinder their educational
progress. Many have special educational needs or disabilities,
including social, emotional and mental health issues. More than
one in 10 have been diagnosed with autistic spectrum
disorder.
Those challenges mean that kinship children are much more likely
than their peers to attend SEN schools. Kinship children in
England alone are over three times more likely to have an EHCP
than all other pupils. Despite their needs, kinship children
often do not receive the same level of support as those in local
authority care. The lack of support can leave them struggling to
cope in the classroom and with their post-school opportunities,
impacting their ability not only to learn but to thrive. Kinship
carers want educators to be better trained to understand the
unique challenges that kinship children face, and to provide the
support that these children need throughout their lives. It is
crucial that we address the barriers and ensure that kinship
children receive the support they need to flourish in their
educational journey, just to give them a fair crack of the whip.
That means improving access to special educational services,
providing targeted training for educators and recognising the
unique challenges faced by kinship families. By doing so, we can
create a more inclusive and supportive educational environment
for all children, ensuring that, as we have said in our mission
statement, every child, regardless of background or
circumstances, has the opportunity to succeed.
I want to finish by asking the Minister a couple of questions,
including whether the Government are considering taking any
specific actions to support the children in kinship care and
whether an assessment has been made of the gap in SEND provision
disproportionately affecting children in kinship care.
3.06pm
(Livingston) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe
() on securing this important
debate.
University is great, but it is not for everyone. We need to have
alternatives of equal status, value and quality. West Lothian
college in my constituency, under the principal Jackie Galbraith,
is a fantastic institution that delivers a range of vocational
and non-vocational courses to thousands of pupils and learners
every year. But colleges across Scotland have faced a decade of
decline under the SNP, with a lack of focus and a lack of
funding. Since 2021 there has been a 17% real-terms decline in
college funding, with the most recent Scottish budget cutting
£32.7 million from the budget for Scottish colleges, including a
£12 million cut to student support funding.
However, with a UK Labour Government there is hope for further
education in Scotland. The UK Budget delivers an extra £1.5
billion to the Scottish Government this year, and an extra £3.4
billion next year for them to invest in Scottish higher
education. The Scottish Government now have the resources to
restore Scottish colleges to their full potential, but they must
act at pace and with a competence that they have so far not shown
in order to do so.
On apprenticeships the picture is no better. The SNP promised to
deliver more apprenticeships, but they had to be bounced into
funding modern apprenticeships for the next financial year when a
press release from the Scottish Training Federation noted how
their failure to fund Skills Development Scotland had left
“apprentices, training providers and employers in limbo”.
Across Livingston constituency I have met employers in
renewables, house building and the food and drink sector, and all
have spoken to me about the lack of apprenticeships in their
sectors.
Now that the Scottish Government have the funding, as my
colleague in the Scottish Parliament has said, they have
“nowhere to hide” from their record on funding for education and
apprenticeships. It is finally time for them to show ambition for
Scotland and break down the barriers for people across the
Livingston constituency and across Scotland.
3.08pm
(Southampton Itchen)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe
() on securing this debate,
which is a crucial opportunity to reflect on the steps that we
must now take to open up opportunities for all to thrive.
Employers regularly tell me that they are urgently seeking people
equipped not just with the skills of today but the skills of
tomorrow. They are preparing for new waves of technology,
evolving processes and increased automation—preparing for the
future. In my constituency of Southampton Itchen we see great
examples of that at the National Oceanography Centre and in the
transformative technology at Ocean Infinity. Those and many other
organisations embody the future that we are building—an economy
fit for the 21st century. Only if we plan with intention and
foresight for that future will we be able to break down the
barriers to opportunity. That is why it is essential that
Ministers take advantage of the upcoming curriculum review and
the establishment of Skills England to build the foundations of
what my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe has set
out today and move away from high stakes assessment, pivoting
instead towards providing young people in schools with the
academic base and the practical, applicable skills and
opportunities that exist today and that inspire and excite
them.
What might all that look like? It is a curriculum that is fit
for, as hon. Members have said, kids with SEND, those with care
experience, and those who are young carers. It is about practical
skills, including financial and media literacy. It is about an
ambitious approach to work experience. It is about realising the
value of early visits to sites of industry and creative
companies, which really inspire. It is about building resilience
in our children and young people.
In my constituency, Southampton college and Itchen college are
working hard to equip young people with the qualifications and
skills—the apprenticeships—they need and the preparation they
deserve. It is institutions such as these that may benefit from
the £300 million cash investment that we announced in the Budget.
That kind of targeted support and a revamped programme of study
and skills development will drive meaningful change in our
communities. As someone for whom education made all the
difference, and as the proud husband of a secondary school
teacher, I know that it all starts with the foundations of
education. We can now look forward to real investment in
them.
3.10pm
(Mid Cheshire) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe
() on securing this important
debate. With 4.3 million children living in poverty in the UK and
one in four in my constituency, covering Northwich, Winsford and
Middlewich, it is an urgent debate. Child poverty latches on to
children before they are born, stays with them throughout their
educational journey and follows them into adulthood.
We know that education is the key to lifting people out of
poverty. UNESCO estimates that world poverty could be cut in half
if all adults completed secondary education. It is vital that we
tackle each barrier to that outcome head on. There are many
barriers to choose from, and we have heard many today. We could
discuss high transport costs or low availability of services. We
could discuss the effect of poor-quality housing or the lack of
available social housing.
As a number of my colleagues have done, I will focus on provision
for children with special educational needs and disabilities. In
the House, we have heard time and again about inadequate
provision for young people with SEND. Every young person deserves
the opportunity to thrive in an environment that meets their
needs. Despite the best intentions of everyone involved, the
current system is broken and actively incentivises bad outcomes
for everyone. The recently published National Audit Office report
clearly sets out the stark inadequacies of a system that has not
only lost the confidence of families but is adversarial, causes
immense trauma for children and parents, and sets young people up
to fail. It is abundantly clear that we need to rebuild the
system from the ground up to ensure that it is not just
functional, but robust and fully equipped to provide the
necessary support for those that need it.
We need more early intervention, and improved teacher training so
that schools are better able to identify and adapt to SEN. We
need nothing short of a revolution in how mainstream schools,
particularly at secondary level, approach SEN, accompanied by
more resource provision. We need to increase capacity in our
state-run special schools and avoid the use of private schools
that cost local authorities five or six times as much per child.
Above all, we need to rebuild trust between parents and a system
that has failed them for too long.
I am pleased that the Government have made it a priority to put
in place a SEN system that will break down barriers to
opportunity and ensure that every child can achieve and thrive. I
will champion this crucial mission on behalf of my
constituents.
3.13pm
(Milton Keynes Central)
(Lab)
Something about under your chairmanship—sorry, I have forgotten
the line, Mr Pritchard. My apologies.
(in the Chair)
No worries at all. I will take anything—within reason.
Thank you, Mr Pritchard. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for
Folkestone and Hythe () for bringing forward this
really important debate. Education is the best way in the world
to bring peace and prosperity, and for people in my constituency
of Milton Keynes to get better jobs and have better lives.
In the 1960s, Harold Wilson dreamed of a university of the air.
Jennie Lee made that a reality through the Open University, which
she chose to base in Milton Keynes—I am very lucky in that. The
OU is so important for educational opportunity, because it makes
no distinction based on someone's formal educational
qualifications. In fact, it actively encourages those without
formal qualifications to come forward and be everything that they
can be. It is absolutely crucial for social mobility. More than a
quarter of the undergraduates live in the most deprived areas
across the UK, and more than 37,000 students last year had some
kind of disability, particularly those who had been failed by the
current school system and wanted the opportunity to make the most
of their lives.
The most important thing about the OU is its flexible learning
model, which has been taken forward by many colleges and
universities right across the UK and the world, including the
Russell Group. At the heart of any ambitious Labour Government is
education, education, education for everyone. Being for everyone
means that it has to be at the heart of our universities,
colleges and schools, and so far this generation is not seeing
that investment. I ask the Minister: how will we transform those
opportunities for people in Milton Keynes and for my daughters,
who are currently going through school?
3.15pm
(Airdrie and Shotts)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I am grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and
Hythe () for securing this debate. As
a former senior lecturer at a further education college in
Glasgow, I recognise the importance of this issue across the UK,
but I will focus my brief remarks on Scotland.
In Scotland we have had 17 years of SNP Government: 17 years of
money being spent on projects that have not worked and 17 years
of further education being treated as an afterthought. As a
former FE lecturer in engineering, I will always place particular
value on STEM courses. A once-great industrial nation, Scotland
has communities such as mine in Airdrie and Shotts where the
industries of the past still shape who we are today, and indeed
where we will go in the future. However, I cannot stress enough
the importance of the word “opportunity”. Opportunity for a
decent education beyond our school years and for well-paid,
secure employment is something we may take for granted, but for
many in my constituency it is a distant possibility rather than a
reality.
I took the time to attend a meeting of the Educational Institute
of Scotland, my former union, in North Lanarkshire, and hear
directly from FE staff. The words “undervalued”, “overworked” and
“underpaid” came up again and again. As a former senior lecturer
myself, it was tough to hear that the challenges of working in
the sector had worsened only a few years after I left, but my
passion to see renewed focus on and investment in FE has only
strengthened.
The lack of investment is understandable from a Scottish
Government that are financially illiterate. We have come to
expect this narrow Weltanschauung from them. However, we must
understand how it came about: too many people placed at the top
of institutions in our country who have never had a trade, never
worked their way up learning every aspect of their trade or
business, and never understood the basics of how industry works
and what technical and human skills are required for a modern
workforce.
I attended the Open University—an unashamedly Labour policy—and
place significant value on a good education and the importance of
opportunity in an individual's outcomes. I will use my time in
this place to fight to eliminate barriers to that, and I look
forward to working with hon. Members in doing so. Again, I thank
my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe for securing
this important and timely debate.
3.18pm
(Chatham and Aylesford)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe
() for securing this debate. As
a former teacher in secondary education, like many others here,
this issue is a particular passion. There are a multitude of
situational, institutional and dispositional barriers that impact
people. Those barriers will impact each and every one of us over
the course of our lives, and across our constituencies many
people will be affected by those barriers layered on top of each
other.
I will talk about three types of barrier in particular. They were
identified by the former Government, but I believe they need to
be tackled by this Government. The first is age. We know that
over the course of our lifetimes, many of us might have multiple
careers, depending on future election results. Many of our
constituents will also have multiple jobs and multiple careers,
and they need to be given opportunities in the employment
landscape to engage in continuous professional development. They
need access to courses—not necessarily university courses, but
other types of courses. What can be done to promote continuous
professional development in the workplace? We know that is
age-related as well.
I want to highlight the fact that BAE Systems, a major employer
in my constituency that just invested £200 million extra in the
Rochester aerospace division, is promoting continuous
professional development within its employment base, as well as
additional apprenticeships for those aged 18 and over. That type
of large-scale initiative can also link with the Government's
investment strategy around the green new deal, and where we can
set the direction of the future and align it with colleges and
aspiration.
The second barrier, as many of my colleagues have mentioned, is
SEND access. Having met headteachers last week in Holmesdale
School and Holborough Lakes in my constituency, I can tell hon.
Members now that local authorities, including Kent, are
struggling with getting provision into schools and supporting our
students. What can we do to ensure that this appalling legacy is
redressed?
The final barrier is early years access. One of the proudest
achievements of the last Labour Government was Sure Start, which
gave educational opportunities. We know that if we target
students at the very youngest age, outcomes can be positive at
the end of their lives. That life course is absolutely critical
if we are to get aspiration into our young people, so what will
the Government do around early years provision so that we can get
support to parents and give educational opportunities to all our
young people?
3.20pm
(Harlow) (Lab/Co-op)
Thank you, Mr Pritchard, for the opportunity to speak in this
debate. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and
Hythe () for bringing this important
discussion to the House.
Like many who have spoken today, I am a former teacher, and I
know of the huge impact that a child's home life can have on
educational attainment. I feel it is really important that when
we talk about children's educational attainment, we consider not
only exam results, but the wider school experience—sometimes we
call it the hidden curriculum. In my constituency of Harlow,
there are pockets of high child poverty. Some 17.3% of children
in Harlow live in low-income families compared with the Essex
average of 12.8%, and we saw that during the terrible pandemic,
in which nearly 8,000 families had food parcels delivered to
them. This will have a huge impact on children—no child will be
able to learn if they are hungry—and I welcome this Government's
pledge of free breakfast clubs in every primary school.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Leeds South West and Morley (Mr
Sewards) mentioned, I will speak about a specific group of young
people who are often forgotten: young carers. Some 38% of young
carers surveyed reported that they regularly miss school because
of their caring situation. No young person can learn when they
are not in school, and no one can focus with the anxiety of being
away from those who they care for. I welcome the statement by my
right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and
Sport, who has pledged to make young carers an integral part of
the recently announced youth strategy, and I ask that young
carers be a golden thread in any future educational reform.
I recently had the privilege of inviting a group of young carers
to Parliament. One young girl highlighted that when she rang up
her university and said that she could no longer attend because
of her caring commitment, she was not asked any follow-up
questions. We also know that young carers are not classified as
disadvantaged in education. Another young carer said that he felt
there was no description that fitted him when he went to
university. When he went on the university's website, there was
no description of a young carer that fitted his young caring
abilities.
I will finish with an ask. We know that this lack of awareness of
young carers across education and universities needs to be
recognised and responded to. I want to see young carer leads as a
standard, not an exception.
3.23pm
(Stoke-on-Trent North) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe
() on securing this important
debate.
Barriers to learning and skills development affect not only
children and young people in my constituency of Stoke-on-Trent
North and Kidsgrove, but adults. Upskilling is key to economic
participation and engagement in the labour market, yet last week,
when I met our local Staffordshire chamber of commerce, it
highlighted concerns from local employers about a lack of basic
skills development among young people and adults at all points in
their careers, so it is important that we focus on helping people
to achieve those qualifications. Our city council, local further
education and independent providers work incredibly hard to
upskill adults, and that is reflected in our higher participation
rates in further education and skills. Tackling barriers to
educational opportunity is really important in promoting social
mobility in my constituency of Stoke-on-Trent North and
Kidsgrove, and many of our local schools and colleges focus on
and recognise that.
However, as we know, barriers to opportunity are multifaceted.
They are linked to deprivation, housing conditions and household
income, and improving educational outcomes goes hand in hand with
addressing socioeconomic inequality.
Perhaps the most significant barriers to educational opportunity
in Stoke-on-Trent North and Kidsgrove are the high rates of
speech, numeracy and language deficiency in our early years
outcomes. As we all know, early years development is a
significant predictor of our educational outcomes across the
whole life course. Sadly, last year in Stoke-on-Trent, only one
in two of our two-year-olds had a good level of development
compared with nearly 80% in England, and the level of development
locally has been declining for a number of years.
Tackling barriers to educational opportunity begins in the very
early years. I hope the Minister will agree that investment in
our early years is critical to tackling those barriers.
3.25pm
Dr (Stoke-on-Trent South)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Pritchard. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe () for securing this important
debate.
I want to focus on the importance of the fabric of the buildings
in which we deliver our educational opportunities, and on one
particular school in my constituency of Stoke-on-Trent
South—Trentham academy. I have been a teacher for 30 years, and I
was astonished at what I saw when I visited recently. I met the
headteacher, Mr Mike Whittingham, to discuss the Trentham academy
estate and to see for myself the challenges that it has
faced.
I will say at the outset that Trentham is an excellent school. It
has achieved a “good” Ofsted rating, with “outstanding” in some
areas, and it is highly oversubscribed. The 750-capacity school
already has more than 790 pupils, and last year it received 580
applications for new students as the first choice of parents. It
delivers excellent education. It has a strong ethos, the teachers
are smiling and it is a great little school, so when I visited I
could not have been more shocked at the state of it. There are
rotting floors and mould in some classrooms. There are annual rat
infestations, with fly infestations following. Rats and other
vermin have repeatedly fallen into classrooms, into teachers'
hair and, worst of all, into their cups of tea, which is enough
of an excuse in itself to rebuild the school.
There are only five female toilet cubicles, three male cubicles
and 11 cubicles in a unisex toilet, which I would not enter—not
because it is unisex, but because it is just not fit for purpose.
It is technically against building regulations, and the disabled
accessible toilets are inadequate. Legislation says that there
must be one toilet per 20 pupils. Trentham academy currently has
one toilet per 40 pupils, and I would not go in some of those. I
could continue. Another issue is the poor fire doors and the real
fire safety risks.
I welcome the school rebuilding fund, with £2.4 billion for
school maintenance and £1.4 billion for school rebuilding. I ask
the Minister merely for the money to rebuild the school, and I
assure her that we will deliver a cracking school with great
education, and fill the desperate need for extra secondary school
places in Stoke-on-Trent.
3.28pm
(Twickenham) (LD)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe () on securing such an
important and wide-ranging debate. Tackling barriers to
educational opportunity is critical to everything—to the lives of
our young people, to the strength of our economy, and to the
future of our country and society. Given the breadth of the
topic, I hope Members will forgive me for not being able to cover
everything in depth, but I will try to cover as much territory as
I can.
Children face all sorts of barriers to the education they
deserve, whether that is growing up in poverty at home, or
getting the necessary support for special educational needs,
disabilities or mental ill health. Some children may grow up in
foster care, and more than 140,000 grow up in kinship care, as
the hon. Member for Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes () discussed. They may be young
carers, which the hon. Members for Leeds South West and Morley
(Mr Sewards) and for Harlow () mentioned. None of their
needs should be forgotten—everything from hunger, to abuse, to
the damaging impact of social media should be taken into account.
They are all barriers that young people face in their education
today.
It is not just about children at school; the vital role of
education starts in the early years and continues throughout
people's lives. Indeed, the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe
opened the debate by focusing on adult education and skills,
which is vital at a time when the demands of our economy are
changing so rapidly and unpredictably. It has never been more
important that adults have the opportunities they need to learn
new skills so that they can get well-paid, secure new jobs. I
look forward to seeing the detail that the new Government bring
forward in their reform of the apprenticeship levy and their
review of the reform of level 3 qualifications. I also hope they
will look at boosting apprenticeship pay for young people, which
is out of step with the national minimum wage.
Rather than speak about all those things in any detail, I will
focus on a few barriers and offer a few solutions that I hope the
Minister will consider carefully. One of the biggest barriers to
educational opportunities is, of course, poverty. With just over
4 million children in the UK estimated to be living in poverty,
that equates to nine in every classroom. In a country like ours,
that is utterly shameful. Many hon. Members who are former
teachers will recognise the phrase often said to me when I go
into schools, which is that school staff see themselves as the
fourth emergency service as they deal with poverty and the social
issues that brings. Whether it is children living in poor
housing, with poor health or with challenging relationships at
home, we all hear from teachers who spend time helping
disadvantaged pupils with food, uniforms and other basics that
their families are struggling to provide. That simply cannot go
on.
I suggest to the Minister that there are three ways to tackle
poverty, and child poverty in particular. First, we should
abolish the cruel two-child benefit cap, which denies more than
one and a half million children and their families the support
they deserve. Its abolition would lift some 300,000 children out
of poverty immediately, giving them the chance to learn, to grow
and to access the life chances that are available to some of
their more well-off classmates.
Secondly, we should extend eligibility for free school meals.
Food poverty poses a particular barrier to education: hungry
children struggle to learn and they often struggle with their
behaviour. They face a fundamental barrier that many of their
classmates may be lucky enough to avoid, and there is simply no
excuse in 2024 for a child to be hungry at school. By expanding
free school meals to all children in poverty, we could ensure
that 900,000 children are no longer at risk of being hungry in
the afternoon and having to learn on an empty stomach. I urge the
Minister to make that commitment.
If that is too big an ask of the Chancellor, a good first step
would be the auto-enrolment of all those who are eligible for
free school meals. In Lib Dem-led Durham county council, the
introduction of auto-enrolment this academic year has already led
to some 2,500 extra children receiving a hot, healthy meal in the
middle of the school day. All the evidence tells us that those
children will have improved educational and health outcomes.
Thirdly, we should tackle the attainment gap through a tutoring
guarantee. The attainment gap between disadvantaged and more
well-off pupils has widened every year since 2020. The evidence
is clear that tutoring can be highly effective in improving
educational outcomes for disadvantaged young people. Small-group
tutoring showed its value under the national tutoring programme,
which was poorly implemented at first, but when school leaders
were empowered to deliver it, the evidence has shown that
tutoring does not just lead to improved attainment but can help
to build pupils' confidence and benefit their attendance, which
is currently such a big problem in our schools. Funding for
tutoring ran out in July this year, so will the Government commit
to a national tutoring guarantee, so that every disadvantaged
pupil can access the support they need? It would be a small step
with a huge impact that would help to break down one of the
biggest barriers to education in our society today.
Hon. Members have spoken about the huge crisis in our special
educational needs and disabilities system, which affects one in
six pupils. Only 17% of SEND pupils achieve grade 5 or above at
GCSE in English and Maths, compared with 51% of other pupils, and
they are much more likely to be suspended or permanently
excluded. At the beginning of last year, when I visited Feltham
young offender institution, the vast majority of young men there
had special educational needs and were out of education for a lot
of their childhood.
There is simply not enough mainstream support available at
school. Coupled with a lack of specialist provision, that has
left many children languishing at home without proper access to
education. This is an enormous challenge that deserve many
debates of its own, and we have had many well-subscribed debates
in this place since the general election. Indeed, last month I
secured an urgent question on the National Audit Office report
that has been mentioned. I urge the Minister to look again at
Liberal Democrat proposals for a new national body for SEND to
support children with the most complex needs, for more training
and specialists to identify needs early, and for speeding up the
building of state special schools.
We know that SEND is closely related to poor mental health
services. Our mental health services are struggling to keep pace
with demand, and there is huge unmet need. Research conducted by
the Liberal Democrats earlier this year revealed that over
300,000 children are stuck on a mental health waiting list. Many
of those children will struggle to learn properly and will almost
certainly experience their condition getting worse while they are
waiting for support. With the number of children with a
diagnosable mental health condition now hitting one in five,
putting a dedicated mental health professional in every school,
both primary and secondary, is urgent.
The hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent North ( ) made a brief comment on the early
years sector, which has not been talked about much in the debate.
After years of Conservative underfunding of the early years
sector, the Labour Government are introducing a national
insurance rise that will hit many private and not-for-profit
early years providers. The Early Years Alliance said this
could
“push the sector to the brink of collapse.”
I look forward to hearing what the Minister has to say about
whether she is pressing her colleagues in the Treasury to ensure
that sufficient funding is available, so that parents do not have
to foot the bill once again and more disadvantaged parents and
their children are not forced out of early years provision,
because the early years are when we can make the biggest impact
on educational attainment.
I recognise that all these solutions cost money, but it is time
we stopped seeing our children as a cost item in a profit and
loss account. It is time we saw our children and young people and
their education as one of the best investments we can make—an
investment in the potential of every individual, in our society
and in our economy. This Government cannot be serious about
growth if they do not invest in educational opportunity.
3.37pm
(Sevenoaks) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe () on securing the debate and
on his focus on the specific issue—it was a very good speech. I
echo the commendation from him and the hon. Member for Livingston
() of the work of colleges
and the important things they do.
I will get the ding-dong out the way. I gently point out to the
hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe that apprenticeship starts
under the Conservatives went up quite considerably from 2010 to
2022-23, from 279,000 to 337,000. I am sure he will want to
reflect that in his closing remarks. I also want to pick up on
something said by the hon. Member for Portsmouth North (). We are never going to get
anywhere if we talk about a toxic legacy on education under the
Conservatives. We all want to make progress on this stuff. In
2010, we were behind Germany and France in PISA; now we are
ahead. Obviously, we can contrast that with what happened in
Wales and Scotland.
The hon. Member for Glasgow East () was absolutely right that the
SNP has failed to close the gap for disadvantaged children. If we
are going to make progress, which we all want to do, on raising
educational standards and helping disadvantaged children, it is
important to look at why some things have gone well, and one of
the reasons is a knowledge-based curriculum. I say to the hon.
Member for Southampton Itchen () that we need to be careful
about what we do in this area, because the worst thing we can do
for disadvantaged children is dilute academic standards.
I will get to the meat of the debate now because I think I have
covered that. We are all interested in the number of
apprenticeships going up. I would be interested to know from the
Minister how much apprenticeship start numbers will go up and
whether the Government stand by the pledge to spend up to 50% of
the apprenticeship levy on other types of training. That was
committed to before the election. I am not clear as to whether
that is still the case now, so it would be helpful for the
Minister to give some clarification on that specific point.
I agree with the hon. Member for Caithness, Sutherland and Easter
Ross () that once skills have gone, it
is very difficult to get them back. What is the Minister doing to
safeguard specific high-value and rare skills, particularly in
the craft area? I hope she answers correctly the brilliant
contribution from my right hon. Friend the Member for East
Hampshire () on free school meals, holiday
activities and breakfast clubs, all of which are crucial to
driving forward the progress of disadvantaged children.
I share interest in the question asked by the hon. Member for
Hyndburn (Sarah ) on when the children's wellbeing
Bill will be introduced. The Lib Dem spokesman, the hon. Member
for Twickenham (), mentioned the importance of
driving down the number of absences, which we absolutely want to
do on a cross-party basis. We will very much support the
register, which I believe is going to be in that Bill, but when
will that Bill be brought forward and how does the Minister
intend to make it work?
The speeches made about young carers by the hon. Members for
Leeds South West and Morley (Mr Sewards) and for Harlow () were very moving and
absolutely right, and I am interested in the Minister's comments
on them. The mention by the hon. Member for Twickenham of state
special schools was important. I was pleased to see that they
have not been paused, but given the speech given last week by the
Secretary of State, will the Minister confirm that she still
believes in the principle of having separate special schools?
Will they be continued and will parents have the choice as to
whether they send their kids to them?
I very much echo the comments from the hon. Member for Twickenham
about the importance of early years. I will quibble with her
about the funding that has gone into early years, which obviously
increased massively under the last Government, but we have a real
problem now with early years funding. The national insurance
contributions change will have a significant impact on the
sector. It will means that, in contrast to what the Prime
Minister said today, costs for parents will go up. Also,
childcare provision has had no guarantees that the Government's
funding formula will include provision for the increased cost
from NICs. Obviously, under the previous Government we set it up
so that the minimum wage increases will be taken into account.
Will the Minister please confirm today that the increased costs
from employers' national insurance contributions will be taken
into account by the Government in the funding formula? Otherwise,
we are going to have a real crisis with provision. The Minister
needs to recognise that and take it away if she cannot answer
now.
More broadly, this has been a helpful and interesting debate.
Education is an area where we need to work together to make
progress for disadvantaged children. I say to all Labour Members
that the Conservatives will drive that forward by insisting on
high academic standards and the rigorous holding to account of
schools for their performance, and by ensuring that the
curriculum is knowledge based and drives children forward. We
will support the Government if they seek to drive up
apprenticeship starts and improve vocational education, and we
will work as hard as we can with them on improving the current
absence rates, because we know they are hitting disadvantaged
children.
(in the Chair)
Order. Before I call the Minister, I should say that if she wants
to make time for the mover of the motion to have a minute or two
at the end, I think we have time, if she is so minded.
3.43pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education ()
It is a real honour to respond to this debate on this important
matter, and I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and
Hythe () for securing it, and for its
wide scope as well.
I also thank all hon. Members for their contributions—I will try
to answer their wide remarks and questions as best I can—and I
want to mention a few. My hon. Friend the Member for Great
Grimsby and Cleethorpes () mentioned kinship carers and
SEND, and my hon. Friend the Member for Hyndburn (Sarah ) also talked about SEND. My hon.
Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent South (Dr Gardner) talked
about the need for buildings, and the hon. Member for Strangford
() spoke about adding value. The hon. Member for
Chichester () talked about issues in
the creative industries, and the Government's response to them.
My hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent North ( ) spoke about early years, and
there have also been conversations about young carers, breakfast
clubs and so on.
The Government believe that the opportunity to enjoy a good life
with a great job, and to secure a home, should belong to
everyone. Every child and young person should have the
opportunity to succeed, no matter who they are, where they are
from or how much their parents earn, but as a nation we are yet
to fulfil that promise. A person's background often counts more
towards success than effort and enterprise, and too many children
are held back by the circumstances they are born into. Children
from the lowest-earning families, those from diverse backgrounds,
those with special educational needs and disabilities, those with
experience of the care system and young carers face too many
barriers to building the best life they can.
Too many children and young people grow up seeing success as
something that happens to others, but it also belongs to them.
That is why this new Government will be a mission-led one, with a
defining mission to break the unfair link between background and
opportunity. The opportunity mission will build opportunity for
all by giving every child the best start in life. It will help
them achieve, thrive and build skills for opportunity and growth,
and will ensure security.
Building skills for opportunity and growth is key to the
opportunity mission. From the age of 16 onwards lies the
transition into the world of work and future opportunities. We
will ensure that every young person can follow the pathway that
is right for them, whether that is through high-quality
apprenticeships, colleges or universities, including Open
university. The right skills and courses give people the ability
to progress into good jobs and not shy away from opportunity.
My hon. Friend the Member for Folkestone and Hythe focused mostly
on skills and technical education. I assure all hon. Members that
the Government are focused on opportunities for everyone,
whatever their background, age, ability and identity. We are
ambitious for children and young people, and for their
aspirations. Our higher education system is globally recognised
for its excellence, which is great. The Government recognise that
university is right for many, but that it is not the only option.
Apprenticeships and skills are absolutely the right option for
others. That is why we are determined to get it right and support
young people who wish to take that path. My hon. Friend is
absolutely right that under 14 years of Conservative Government,
the number of apprenticeships has plummeted. The apprenticeship
levy was exposed as inadequate.
Will the Minister give way?
I have so much to get through that I am afraid I cannot.
Skills policy has too often been made in isolation, leading to a
system that is confusing for employers and individuals, and that
does not lead to the right jobs for our population. Skills
shortage vacancies in England more than doubled between 2017 and
2022, from 226,500 to 531,200. Too few young people—indeed,
people of all ages—have been able to gain the benefits of a
quality post-16 education. Those figures are shocking.
We need to do so much more to ensure that people do not face
unemployment, low wages and poor health outcomes. The lack of a
clear plan has led to widespread skill shortages in areas such as
construction, manufacturing, hospitality, information and
communication, healthcare and social care. That is why meeting
the skill needs of the next decade is central to delivering the
Government's five missions: economic growth, opportunity for all,
a stronger NHS, safer streets and clean energy. We aim to create
a clear, flexible, high-quality skills system that supports
people of all ages, breaks down barriers to opportunity and
drives economic growth.
We have not stood still. Last month's Budget included an
investment of an additional £300 million in further education to
ensure that young people develop the skills they need. It also
included £950 million of skills capital funding, including £300
million to ensure that college estates are in good condition so
they meet students' learning needs. We have also commenced a
curriculum and assessment review, which is now in full swing with
roadshows up and down the country. It will deliver a curriculum
that is rich in knowledge, strong in skills and led by evidence.
We have announced the youth guarantee, which will help to ensure
that young people have the opportunity to acquire the skills that
they need.
We will reform the apprenticeship levy into a growth and skills
levy to deliver greater flexibility for both learners and
employers. As a first step we will introduce foundation
apprenticeships to give more young people a foot in the door. The
new foundation apprenticeships will support clear progression
pathways into further work-based training and sustained
employment. We will support and fill the pipeline of new talent
that employers need. We are investing £40 million to support the
development and delivery of foundation apprenticeships, as well
as apprenticeships of a shorter duration that will provide
further flexibility for employers, as so many have called
for.
We have also listened to feedback about qualifications; concerns
were expressed about the rapid pace of reforms from the previous
Government, about the quality of qualifications and about how
they do not always serve students well. This Government are
determined to do better—and indeed we will. We have therefore
announced a short-term internal review of qualifications reform,
which clearly signals our intention to balance the range of
concerns and to provide clarity in the qualifications landscape.
We believe that this is the best way to support students, unlock
opportunity, harness talent and drive growth.
We have introduced Skills England in shadow form. It will ensure
we have the highly trained workforce needed to deliver national,
regional and local skills for the next decade, aligned with the
upcoming industrial strategy. Skills England will ensure that
there is a comprehensive choice of apprenticeships, training and
technical qualifications for individuals and employers to access.
Skills England will ensure that the skills system is clear, and
that both young people and older adults can navigate it,
strengthening career pathways into jobs across the economy. It
will increase the quality and quantity of skills development in
the workplace by providing an authoritative assessment of
national and regional skills needs in the economy, now and in the
future.
Moving to the school rebuilding programme, this Government have
increased next year's capital allocation to improve school
buildings to £2.1 billion, which is £300 million more than this
year. We have also committed to £1.4 billion to support the
current school rebuilding programme to deliver 518 projects
across England.
Many issues have been raised about children with special
educational needs and disabilities and the anxieties of their
parents. On reform, this Government's ambition is that all
children and young people with SEND will receive the right
support to succeed in their education and as they move into adult
life. We are committed to improving inclusiveness and expertise
in mainstream schools, and to ensuring that special school
provision continues to meet children's most complex needs. That
will restore parents' trust, as they will know that their child
is getting the support they desperately need. We will work with
the sector, as it is essential that we join our valued partners
in that shared vision.
There were questions about free school meals and ensuring that
children are eligible. We have a mission to break down the
barriers to opportunity, and to confront child poverty. The
continued provision of free school meals to disadvantaged
children plays an important role in that. The Government spend
around £1.5 billion annually on free lunches for over 3 million
pupils. As with all Government programmes, we will keep our
approach open and continue to review it. It remains our ambition
that no child should go hungry.
We are also doing a child poverty review. The new child poverty
ministerial taskforce will drive cross-Government action on child
poverty, starting by overseeing the development of an ambitious
child poverty strategy, which will be published next spring. The
taskforce publication of 23 October, “Tackling Child Poverty:
Developing Our Strategy”, sets out our framework for how the
strategy will be developed, harnessing all available levers to
deliver a reduction in child poverty in this Parliament as part
of our ambitious 10-year strategy, which addresses its root
causes.
On breakfast clubs, we will remove barriers to opportunities by
ensuring that every primary school pupil, no matter their
circumstance, is well prepared for school. From April 2025, free
breakfast clubs will be available for up to 750 early adopters
ahead of the national roll-out. Early adopters will allow us to
identify and tackle barriers to implementing the full breakfast
club roll-out. That is the first step in our commitment to enable
breakfast clubs in all primary schools.
Before the Minister moves on, my main question on breakfast clubs
was about what happens to the national school breakfast programme
for secondary and special schools. We have heard a lot about
primary schools, but we have not heard much about secondary and
special schools in disadvantaged areas. Is she in a position to
tell us a little more about that?
This Government are committed to tackling child poverty. As I
have already outlined as regards the poverty taskforce, many of
the issues and areas are continuing to be reviewed and worked
out. We are determined to bring down child poverty. On the
specific areas the right hon. Gentleman mentioned, more
information will be coming, but I am afraid he will have to be
patient, as we had to be patient for the past 14 years.
I also add that through the children's wellbeing Bill, which has
been mentioned, the Government will look to introduce further
strategies for improving the outcomes for children and young
people, and to make the reform and changes that we need. The Bill
will be introduced, as parliamentary time allows, and we
appreciate Members' patience.
Time is quickly moving on and running out. I could say so much
more about so many other areas that were mentioned, but I am
afraid I will have to move to a close. We will try to respond
where we can, but I ask Members, please, to continue to write in
and ask questions. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for
Folkestone and Hythe for securing the debate on such an important
matter and I hope the House appreciates that I made every attempt
to respond.
3.58pm
I thank the Minister for her response and everyone present for
their contributions to this important debate. Members have
highlighted an inheritance of widening inequality, increasing
child poverty, narrowing opportunities and an education system
crying out for change. They have also highlighted that the
Government's proposals for reform give us cause for optimism: the
curriculum review, Skills England, reform of the apprenticeship
levy, improved teacher training on SEND, free breakfast clubs in
primary schools and a properly funded education system.
There are of course particular barriers to opportunity. We heard,
for example, from my hon. Friend the Member for Hyndburn (Sarah
) on SEND; my hon. Friend the Member
for Harlow () on young carers; my hon.
Friend the Member for Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes () on kinship carers; and my
hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent South (Dr Gardner) on
poor school buildings. There is a long way to go.
To respond to the points made by Opposition Members, after the
apprenticeship levy was introduced in 2017, there was a 31% fall
in apprenticeship starts. That fact cannot be denied; it is a
fact that is being responded to by this Government, and it is
part of the inheritance that we are actively addressing. I am
proud to be a Labour MP supporting a Labour Government. We are
the party that introduced Sure Start, the single most effective
measure for reducing child poverty. The measures we are taking
will help ensure that every child, regardless of background, has
access to the opportunities that they deserve.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling barriers to
educational opportunities.
|