Asked by Baroness Bakewell To ask Her Majesty’s Government
whether they will consider further ways of promoting part-time
study in the light of the findings set out in the report by the
Sutton Trust, The Lost Part-Timers. Viscount Younger of
Leckie (Con) My Lords, we want everyone with the potential to
benefit from higher...Request free
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Asked by
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(Con)
My Lords, we want everyone with the potential to benefit
from higher education to do so. Studying part-time brings
considerable benefits for individuals, the economy and
employers. The recently announced review of post-18
education and funding will look at how we can encourage
learning that is more flexible and complements ongoing
government work to support people to study at different
times in their lives.
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(Lab)
I thank the Minister for that Answer, but I would be
pleased to hear more than warm words. I would like action
on the serious report by the Sutton Trust, which found a
fall of 50% in part-time study in the last five years. This
is very serious indeed, particularly for the Government’s
intended strategy, which is supposed to improve social
mobility and encourage part-time study. Will the Government
therefore undertake to include in their coming report on
post-18 education consideration of part-time education as a
whole, which will help fulfil their industrial strategy?
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The noble Baroness has spoken at length on this subject in
the past. We are concerned about the decline in part-time
study. I can reassure her that the review of post-18
education and funding will look at how we can address this
issue further. Indeed, part of its terms of reference
include consideration of:
“How we can encourage learning that is more flexible (for
example, part-time, distance learning and commuter study
options) and complements ongoing government work to support
people to study at different times in their lives”.
Beyond the review, as the noble Baroness will be aware, the
Higher Education and Research Act placed a general duty on
the OfS to consider the means by which learning is provided
and specifically mentions part-time study.
-
(LD)
My Lords, it should be a matter of great concern to see the
decline in mature and part-time students at such
transformational institutions as Birkbeck and the Open
University. Will the Government consider a better-monitored
version of the individual learning account, where
contributions from learners, employers and government could
provide a very effective mix of funding and motivation?
-
I am sure that the panel will take note of the points made
by the noble Baroness. The review covers all post-18
education and funding and it is important for it to look at
this area. In addition to this, since 2012-13 we have
provided tuition fee loans for part-time courses, and in
2018-19 we intend to introduce full-time-equivalent
part-time maintenance loans, so there is some further
action ongoing.
-
(Con)
Would my noble friend accept that one of the greatest
achievements of any post-war Government was the creation of
the Open University? What are the Government doing to
encourage mature adults to take up courses at the Open
University?
-
The Open University is a good example. The noble Lord may
know that there is a restructuring exercise going on there,
and the Open University is looking to change the way it
operates to take account of changing conditions and the
reduction in part-time study. That is something that we
will be looking at.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, the Minister is being remarkably complacent. He
and his colleagues have presided over a devastating
reduction in the number of part-time students. That is
madness when it comes to the priority to upskill people who
have missed out on higher education in the past. The Sutton
Trust report makes abundantly clear that the reason for the
huge reduction is that the Government got rid of
maintenance grants and put the fees up by a huge amount.
Incidentally, in his Statement to this House in February,
the noble Viscount did not mention part-time students. So
instead of a review, why do the Government not reverse that
decision and restore maintenance grants?
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My Lords, the important thing is to look at the reasons for
the decline, and they are indeed complex. Over the past
five years, there have been wider changes to the economy
and there was the removal in 2008-09 of the HEFCE teaching
grant for equivalent and lower-level qualifications, so
there are complex issues here that need to be addressed. I
also point out to the noble Lord that the numbers have
fallen not only in England. The noble Baroness is right
that the number has fallen significantly—actually, I have a
figure of 63%—so we understand the seriousness of this, but
the number has also fallen in Scotland by 22% and in Wales
by 46%.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, is it not important to recognise the particular
problems of part-time students, which are not faced in the
same way by full-time undergraduates starting their studies
at 18? In particular, there are often challenges with
families, occupations, dependants, the difficulty of going
back to full-time education after a long period outside and
all the pressure that that has on people. In a sense, we
should focus far more on the challenges that part-time
students face than the rather more predictable course of
full-time students.
-
The noble Lord is absolutely right. That falls in line with
what our statistics show us, which is that part-time study
typically caters for more mature students: in 2016-17, 53%
of undergraduate entrants were aged 30 or older. But to
look broader to the noble Lord’s question, we are looking
at those people who might not have made the right career
choice and in their 20s or 30s might be looking to make a
change in their career. Part-time study could suit that.
Returning mothers is another important group that we will
be looking to encourage to get back into employment, and
there are also post-retirement courses. All these areas are
important and complex, and we need to look at them as part
of the review.
-
(LD)
My Lords, have the Government considered the link between
immigration, particularly from the rest of the European
Union, and the shortage of medium skills at all levels? I see
FE colleges being cut back as well as part-time education. I
am very conscious that, across Yorkshire, companies find it
easier to recruit directly from Slovakia or Poland than train
their own people. The new apprenticeships scheme, as the
Minister will know, has led to an immediate drop in new
apprentices being taken on last year, so this will not help.
Investing in training, part-time and full-time, for the 50%
of our people who do not go to university is not only key to
our economy but key to reducing the pull factor in
immigration, which comes from companies recruiting directly
from abroad.
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We should look at life from a more positive angle. The noble
Lord mentioned the apprenticeship levy, which is just one of
several apprenticeship or levy schemes that are ongoing,
particularly if we look at the construction sector, which is
very important indeed. The objective is to home grow our own
skills.
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