Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) (): Today I wanted to update both Houses on further policy
developments we are making as part of our efforts to help boost
productivity, ensure that businesses can find and hire the skilled
workers they need, and help people to fulfil their potential. The
impact of the current situation and the longer-term challenges we
are likely to face have underlined the ever-present need to support
all adults in gaining new skills that employers value, whether to
progress in work or to boost their job prospects.
Last month the Prime Minister visited Exeter College and set out
an exciting vision to make lifelong learning a reality,
announcing new opportunities to help more people to realise their
talents, develop new skills and pursue their careers. With that
broader vision in mind, wanting to reduce complexity in the adult
skills landscape and recognising the need to work closely with a
wide range of key stakeholders and experts, we are integrating
the National Retraining Scheme into the National Skills Fund. The
National Retraining Scheme will no longer continue as a separate
programme but rather its work and learning will be rolled into
the development of the National Skills Fund. This will be
reflected in wider communications around the National Skills Fund
and our broader offer for adult skills. It will include the
conclusion of the trials of the Get Help to Retrain service, a
digital platform that helped adults identify their existing
skills as well as new training options.
The findings we have gathered by testing Get help to retrain have
already provided useful insights for the National Careers
Service. This will help inform the further development of the
National Careers Service website for people considering a change
to their career.
The understanding and insights we achieved through high levels of
research and comprehensive user engagement whilst developing the
National Retraining Scheme have also produced a strong foundation
for developing the National Skills Fund and other adult skills
reforms. As both Houses know, the National Skills Fund is a long
term, substantial investment of £2.5bn (£3bn included devolved
administrations) that will drive adult retraining and support our
ambitious agenda for reform to Further Education.
Our engagement with employers on the National Retraining Scheme
ensured we were better sighted on the skills they need their
workers to have, as well as the need for a more flexible approach
to the delivery of skills. Greater flexible provision was a clear
need for both the employers and the individual. Both of these
factors have been central to the design and delivery of the
bootcamps announced in the Prime Minister’s speech, which are a
key element of the National Skills Fund offer.
The bootcamps will support local regions and employers to fill
in-demand digital vacancies. The impact of the COVID crisis has
shown that digital skills are in demand now more than ever, so
these flexible initiatives will be instrumental in giving all
adults the skills employers need. We are planning to expand the
digital bootcamps to more of the country from Spring 2021 and we
also want to extend this model to include other technical skills
training.
The Prime Minister also announced, as part of his Lifetime Skills
Guarantee, that for all adults who do not currently have an A
Level equivalent, we will be fully funding their first full Level
3, focusing on the valuable courses that will help them get ahead
in the labour market.
Through our development of the National Retraining Scheme we have
also undertaken qualitative research into online training
tailored for adults’ needs. Our findings have shown that online
training has the ability to deliver learning at a time and pace
that would fit in with the busy lives that users have. It could
also reach the more remote areas of the country where users might
struggle to access provision at a time that works best for them.
This has informed the development of The Skills Toolkit, which
has recently expanded to provide access to even more
high-quality, free courses, to help all adults gain the
confidence and skills they need to move into new jobs,
potentially in completely new sectors of the jobs market.
We remain firmly committed to working with industry, workers, and
providers. That is why we plan to engage extensively with these
groups right across the country through the upcoming consultation
on the National Skills Fund.
Our strong evidence base, delivered through the National
Retraining Scheme, is summarised in a Key Findings Paper that
will be published today, (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/national-retraining-scheme).
The paper sets out how the extensive learnings and evidence from
the scheme will support our ambitious plans for levelling up
across the country and help to ensure everyone can get the skills
they need, at every stage of their life.
We will set out wider plans for adult skills later in the Autumn
and we will update the Houses in due course. In the meantime, we
will engage closely with stakeholders as we continue to develop
detailed plans for the National Skills Fund, including
considering what role the fund could play in meeting more
immediate needs in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.