Sixth-form Education: International Comparisons Motion made,
and Question proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—(Christopher
Pincher.) 9.41 pm Nic Dakin (Scunthorpe) (Lab) I pay
tribute to all those working in sixth-form education for the
fantastic work they do on behalf of our young people and our
country. I particularly praise the two excellent colleges, North
Lindsey and John...Request free trial
Sixth-form Education: International Comparisons
Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now
adjourn.—(Christopher Pincher.)
9.41 pm
-
(Scunthorpe) (Lab)
I pay tribute to all those working in sixth-form education
for the fantastic work they do on behalf of our young
people and our country. I particularly praise the two
excellent colleges, North Lindsey and John Leggott, that
serve young people in north Lincolnshire. Having led John
Leggott as principal before being elected to this House, I
know the importance of this phase of education in
transforming life opportunities. I also know that, since I
stood down as principal, the challenges facing those who
lead colleges has been immense. Three direct cuts were
imposed on 16 to 18 funding in the last Parliament, whereas
five to 16 funding was protected. On top of that 13.6%
real-terms cut, colleges now face a further 8% erosion of
the current national funding rate over the remainder of
this Parliament due to inflation. There are further
pressures from increased employer pension and national
insurance costs.
The average funding per student in the sixth forms of
schools and academies and in sixth-form colleges is now
£4,583, which is 20% less than the funding received to
educate each 11 to 16-year-old and 47% less than the
average university tuition fee of £8,636 per student. How,
in all logic, can it be so much cheaper to educate a 16 to
18-year-old than a 15-year-old or a 19-year-old?
The Government claim that they have
“provided sufficient funds for every full-time student to
do a full timetable of courses”.
But they have not published any research on the sufficiency
of the funding provided to educate 16 to 18-year-olds. In
short, the Government do not know how much it costs
“to do a full timetable of courses”.
-
(Waveney) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this debate.
With his track record, he is the right person to be leading
it. I suspect like many colleagues, I will be mentioning
Lowestoft College, but does he agree that sixth-form
colleges such as Lowestoft are the underfunded, unsung
heroes of the British education system and that, with the
right resources, they can play a key role in addressing
this country’s productivity gap?
-
The hon. Gentleman is right to praise Lowestoft College,
which, like many colleges in the country, does a fantastic
job on behalf of the young people it educates. He is also
right to say that these colleges need to be properly funded
to ensure they continue to do that good job into the
future.
In reality, the national funding rate—currently £4,000 for
16 and 17-year-olds and £3,300 for 18-year-olds—is
calculated by taking the settlement arrived at between the
Department for Education and the Treasury, and dividing it
by the number of students in the 16 to 18 age group. It is
no more sophisticated than that. In the independent sector,
sixth form fees are higher than secondary fees to reflect
the actual cost of delivery for this age group.
-
(Luton North)
(Lab)
Does my hon. Friend accept the remarkable statistic that
sixth-form colleges outperform all other 16 to 19 forms of
institution across the country, as has been recorded by the
Sixth Form Colleges Association in its wonderful manifesto?
-
I thank my hon. Friend for rightly highlighting the high
level of performance that sixth-form colleges deliver. He
does a fantastic job as a governor of Luton Sixth Form
College and as chair of the all-party group on sixth form
colleges.
There is now a significant gap between the funding made
available to educate sixth formers and the actual cost of
delivering the rounded, high-quality, curriculum we would
all want to see well into the future.
-
(Taunton Deane)
(Con)
I commend the hon. Gentleman for securing this debate. I,
too, have a highly acclaimed sixth-form college in my
constituency, Richard Huish College. It has just been
shortlisted for The Times Educational Supplement top sixth
form awards, and I hope it might win—potentially beating
Lowestoft College. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that with
the budgetary cuts we have seen the enrichment courses—art,
drama and sport—being dropped from many sixth-form
colleges? It is often in such areas that the students who
might not excel academically could excel. Might there not
be a potential knock-on effect on mental health—everybody
is talking about that—and spikes in young people’s mental
health if we do not enable them to do these much more
rounded courses, which are so beneficial?
-
The hon. Lady is right to highlight the fact that certain
elements of the curriculum are under threat when there is
such pressure on funding. Enrichment activities, including
those that address mental health issues, are one of the
many activities that have been under threat over the past
six years. The dramatic collapse in funding does have an
inevitable impact on the education that 16 to 18-year-olds
receive. As someone who has managed resources in a
sixth-form college, I know that there are only a small
number of variables to play with when facing significant
funding cuts, as the sector has since 2010. Alongside the
usual good management things relating to the back office,
procurement, charges, efficiencies and so on, there are a
limited number of options: shrink the curriculum offer;
increase the teaching staff contact time; reduce student
contact time; and increase class sizes. In reality, all
those things have to be done to make things hang together.
-
(Brighton, Pavilion)
(Green)
The hon. Gentleman is making an incredibly powerful case.
On the issue of underfunding, does he agree that sixth-form
colleges are uniquely cruelly treated, because unlike
schools and academies they cannot cross-subsidise from the
more generous funding available for younger students in
schools and they do not receive a VAT reimbursement? So not
only are they the most efficient, with the best track
record on delivery, but they are the most underfunded
section of the higher education area.
-
The hon. Lady is right to point out the performance of
sixth-form colleges and the pressure on their funding. Of
course the funding situation for 16 to 18 education is not
just affecting sixth-form colleges—it is affecting school
sixth forms and academy sixth forms, too. It is affecting
all 16 to 18 experience.
Since 2010, the programmes of study followed by students
have altered in those typical ways I outlined. Back then,
most level 3 students followed a curriculum of four
advanced courses in year 1, plus general studies,
enrichment and tutorial. They progressed on to three or
four courses in year 2, plus enrichment and tutorial. In
most cases, as the hon. Member for Taunton Deane (Rebecca
Pow) pointed out, the enrichment has gone, the tutorial has
shrunk significantly, general studies has largely
disappeared and the number of advanced level courses taken
is now normally three in both years. That leads to
significantly lower student contact time. I know from
experience that there is a direct correlation between
contact time and achievement, particularly for students who
have struggled to achieve at 16.
-
(Cleethorpes)
(Con)
I thank my north Lincolnshire neighbour for giving way and
congratulate him on securing this debate. On the point he
just made, he will know that his neighbouring
constituencies in north and north-east Lincolnshire are
coastal communities, so have particular problems with
social mobility. Does he share my hope that when he
responds the Minister will indicate the Government’s
continuing support for sixth-form colleges such as Franklin
College in Grimsby?
-
I thank my constituency neighbour for his contribution.
Franklin College is, of course, a high-performing,
well-regarded sixth-form college, as are all four Humber
sixth-form colleges—Wyke College, Wilberforce College and,
of course, John Leggott College in Scunthorpe. I am sure
the Minister is listening carefully. He is a very good
Minister and I am sure he is going to give us all hope for
a rosy future when he speaks later in the debate.
The impact of the changes on students has been significant.
The Sixth Form Colleges Association’s 2016 funding impact
survey shows that sixth-form college education is an
increasingly narrow and part-time experience. Two thirds of
sixth-form colleges have already dropped courses as a
result of funding cuts and cost increases. Some 39% have
dropped courses in modern foreign languages, and the vast
majority have reduced or removed the extracurricular
activities available to students, including music, drama,
sport and languages. Worryingly, 64% do not believe that
the funding they will receive next year will be sufficient
to support students who are educationally or economically
disadvantaged—the very point made by my neighbour, the hon.
Member for Cleethorpes (Martin Vickers).
-
(Great Grimsby)
(Lab)
Franklin College in my constituency, Great Grimsby, has
already been mentioned. It has experienced significant
funding cuts, to the point where it has lost around £1
million per year, resulting in a reduction in the courses
offered. Does my hon. Friend think that that will also have
an impact if students want to choose a variety of higher
education courses to further their education beyond
A-level?
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. There is an inevitable
impact on the progression into higher education,
particularly for courses such as modern foreign languages,
as well as, rather worryingly, certain aspects of science,
technology, engineering and mathematics courses.
Today, 15 to 17 hours of weekly tuition and support has
become the norm for sixth-form students in England, but
that would be considered part-time study in most national
education systems. Research commissioned by the Sixth Form
Colleges Association from the Institute of Education
describes sixth-form education in England as “uniquely
narrow and short” compared with the model adopted in
Shanghai, Singapore, Sweden and elsewhere.
In Shanghai, the upper secondary curriculum is based on
eight fundamental subjects: Chinese, mathematics, English,
science, thoughts and politics, society, arts and physical
education. In addition, there are extended subjects and
activities that allow for greater specialisation or for new
or collective forms of learning. Finally, there are
research-based subjects that take two hours per week.
Overall, there is a total of 35 lessons per week, plus an
extra hour per day for meetings and physical exercise.
Lower and upper secondary education offer broadly the same
number of lessons per week, and students receive at least
30 hours of tuition per week.
-
(Colne Valley)
(Con)
I rise to speak as one of the vice-chairmen of the
all-party group on sixth-form colleges. I am proud to have
Greenhead College and Huddersfield New College in my neck
of the woods. I went to both their awards evenings last
week. Greenhead College was celebrating 60 of its students
getting their Duke of Edinburgh gold award, while 85% of
New College students went on to university and academically
it is in the top 10% nationally. Nevertheless, as we have
heard there are huge funding challenges. Does the hon.
Gentleman agree that one of the conclusions of this debate
should be that we have a review of funding so that it
really does tackle the realistic costs of providing a
well-rounded range of subjects so that we can compete
internationally?
-
I very much welcome the hon. Gentleman’s comments. He is
absolutely on the money—literally and metaphorically. The
Minister needs to review the funding and to check that we
are appropriately resourcing that well-rounded education
that we all want to see. The reason for making these
international comparatives is to say, “Well this is what is
being invested in other high performing systems.” If we
want to compete effectively with those high-performing
systems, we need to be willing to look at what we are doing
in a self-critical way and to set out our stall
accordingly. I am sure that that is what the Minister will
want to do when he comes to speak later on in the debate.
In Singapore, the upper secondary curriculum is based on
core examination subjects, elective examination subjects
and compulsory non-examination subjects. The core
examination subjects are studied for around eight hours a
week. Students choose three to four elective subjects and
study each for around four to six hours a week. Compulsory
non-examination subjects—assembly, physical education and
character development—take up to four hours a week.
Students receive between 27 hours tuition and support for
those taking three elective subjects and 32 hours for those
taking four. The duration of study is either two or three
years.
Let us make a European comparison. In Sweden, where I
worked for a number of years, upper secondary education is
structured primarily through three-year national
programmes. Each programme covers a series of foundation
subjects—English, history, physical education and health,
mathematics, science studies, social studies, Swedish and
religion. In addition, a number of subjects specific to a
given programme are chosen. Students receive around 19
hours of tuition a week, but, crucially, this entitlement
is for three years rather than two.
The Institute of Education concludes its report by
describing the English model as
“low hours and short duration.”
Students in other leading education systems receive more
tuition time, study more subjects, and in some cases
benefit from a three-year programme of study rather than a
two-year programme.
-
(Eastleigh) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on bringing this subject
to the House. In fact, the issue has been raised in my
constituency of Eastleigh by the principal of Barton
Peveril, who has talked about the problems relating to
enrichment, the narrowing of education, efficiency and
cross-funding, which are at the heart of our children’s
education, and of course about the impact internationally.
Does he agree that if the Government were to look at this
matter, there would be an impact on our universities? I am
talking about them having to pick up the pieces of our
narrow education if we are to compete internationally.
-
The hon. Lady is absolutely right. In some ways, she
reinforces the point made by my hon. Friend the Member for
Great Grimsby (Melanie Onn).
As I said, the Institute of Education describes the English
model as
“low hours and short duration.”
By contrast with their peers elsewhere in the world,
students in England receive around half as much tuition
time and are following a three-subject diet. In addition,
the funding cut for 18-year-old students has created a
financial disincentive for schools and colleges to offer
young people a third year to complete their sixth-form
studies—and these are the very young people who need the
additional support and additional time.
The Institute of Education contrasted the narrowing of the
curriculum in England when students reach the sixth form
compared with the model adopted by our international
competitors. It said that
“unlike other national systems where the amount of tuition
actually increases in upper secondary education when
compared with the lower secondary phase, the English
experience is the opposite. The sharp reduction in the
number of subjects studied post-16 (an average of four
subjects, now reducing to three) compared with pre-16 (10+
GCSEs or vocational equivalent) appears to represent sudden
movement to a part-time curriculum.”
Bizarrely, despite these huge pressures on mainstream 16 to
18-year-olds, the Government have, since 2010, been able to
spend money on unproven, untested and different types of
provision for 16 to 18-year-olds. That is money that could
have been spent on mainstream students. It has been unwise
indulgence in political peccadillos at a time when there is
contraction in both the population and the budgets.
Some 169 new academy and maintained sixth forms were opened
between 2010 and 2015, but the total number of enrolled
school students has been static. Average cohort sizes were
already small and have declined further. Curiously, the
Department for Education offers little in the way of
practical advice to make school sixth forms work and has
not researched the effectiveness of the reforms that have
brought in so many smaller sixth forms.
10.00 pm
Motion lapsed (Standing Order No. 9(3)).
Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now
adjourn.—(Christopher Pincher.)
-
In March 2016, Ministers introduced five new tests to
ensure that new sixth forms are viable, which I welcome,
but that was a limited step because it does not cover sixth
forms that are already open. There is now a long tail of
small institutions, with 1,180 school sixth forms enrolling
fewer than 100 students. There is emerging evidence that
some of their performance is not quite what we would wish
it to be.
Meanwhile, university technical colleges have struggled to
achieve viability in a system currently built around exams
and transfer at age 16. As a result, six have closed and
one did not open as planned. A sensible policy from
the Department for Education would be to review sixth forms
that are particularly small or underperforming, in the
interests of value for money at a time when money is short.
-
(Stalybridge and
Hyde) (Lab/Co-op)
May I add to the adulation that my hon. Friend is rightly
receiving for his speech tonight? I cannot help mentioning
Ashton Sixth Form College, which is just outside my
constituency—it is in the constituency of my hon. Friend
the Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner), who is
sitting on the Front Bench. Does he agree that one of the
strange bits of Government policy, as I understand it, is
that where demand does exist for more sixth-form provision,
that can be met only through the creation of school,
academy or free school sixth-form provision? That seems
very strange, given the credit that has rightly been given
to the sixth-form sector by Members on both sides of the
House this evening.
-
My hon. Friend makes a good point. The Minister is
listening carefully and will obviously take that point on
board, along with the other points that hon. Members have
made.
I would like to conclude by posing a few questions to the
Minister. Why are sixth-formers in England funded to
receive only half the tuition time and support available to
sixth-formers in Shanghai, Singapore and other leading
education systems? Why are sixth-formers in England facing
a standard diet of just three advanced-level subjects,
while those in other international systems can study eight
or nine?
It is good to have a Secretary of State who was educated in
the comprehensive system and who attended a comprehensive
sixth-form college—it is a first that I very much welcome.
She will be well aware that 744,000 16 to 18-year-olds
choose to study in colleges, while 433,000 choose to study
in schools. All are affected by the squeeze in funding for
their age group. Will she therefore move away from funding
sixth-formers based on an arbitrary funding rate and
conduct a review of funding to ensure that it is linked to
a realistic cost of delivering a rounded, high-quality
curriculum? Will she agree to work with the Sixth Form
Colleges Association, the Association of Colleges and
the Association of School and College
Leaders in conducting the review, building on
the current evidence base?
Finally, in the state sector, education funding decreases
at the age of 16 to an average of £4,583 per student, per
year. In the independent sector, school fees increase at
the age of 16 to an average of £15,333 per student, per
year. What does the Minister think are the implications of
that for social mobility? On the day when the Prime
Minister has made an important speech on the matter, it
sounds to me like the sort of everyday injustice that she
would be keen to tackle in her desire to build a shared
society.
10.04 pm
-
The Minister for School Standards (Mr Nick Gibb)
May I start by adding to House’s adulation of the hon.
Member for Scunthorpe (Nic Dakin) my congratulations on
securing the debate. Ensuring high-quality post-16
education is a priority for the Government and for the
country. We recognise the contribution of the dedicated
staff working in all types of post-16 education and the
hard work of students. In fact, a record proportion of
young people are now participating in education, training
or apprenticeships. I can give my hon. Friend the Member
for Cleethorpes (Martin Vickers) and the hon. Member for
Great Grimsby (Melanie Onn) the assurance that the
Government support sixth-form colleges, including the
sixth-form college mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member
for Colne Valley (Jason McCartney) and Franklin College in
Grimsby.
Education and training in England is widely respected
around the world, but we are determined to make further
improvements to ensure that 16 to 19-year-olds are ready
for the demands of the workplace by moving directly into
skilled employment or by continuing to higher education. We
are therefore reforming academic and technical education
for over-16s and we are learning from the best
international systems.
All countries that we look to learn from have a stage of
education that no longer exclusively takes place in school.
At this stage, there are options for students to gain
relevant experience to prepare them for work either through
apprenticeships or technical education, as we heard in the
debate earlier this afternoon, or to prepare for further
academic study at university. The way that works and the
age at which it starts varies considerably around the
world. For example, in countries such as Germany,
Switzerland and the Netherlands, there is a high level of
investment by employers in vocational training in the
secondary phase and an early emphasis on workplace
training. That leads to lower rates of young people who are
not in education, employment or training than in England,
but the difference in academic standards between pupils
from different socioeconomic backgrounds in those countries
is larger than in England.
By contrast, only about one fifth of 15 to 19-year-olds in
countries such as Japan and Korea are enrolled in
vocational upper-secondary programmes. The remaining 80% of
those cohorts continue a rigorous academic programme. It is
useful to benchmark ourselves—if “to benchmark” is a new
verb—against such countries to understand the strengths and
weaknesses of our education system and to raise our
expectations of what students here can achieve. That is why
I am determined that we should improve our maths teaching
by learning from the high-performing Asian systems such as
those in Shanghai, Singapore and Japan by adopting maths
mastery through the maths hubs programme, but it is not
simply a case of choosing one country to learn from. Our
priority should be making our whole system world class.
There is much to be proud of in comparing our education
system to other countries. For example, England’s
15-year-olds continue to perform significantly above the
OECD average in science and, in 2015, England’s
15-year-olds performed above average in reading for the
first time. However, our performance in maths remains at
the OECD average and a survey of adult skills identified
our 16 to 18-year-olds as having the weakest literacy and
numeracy skills out of 18 countries in 2012. We need to
take action to deal with areas of poor performance. In the
case of literacy and numeracy, we have now made the
continued study of English and maths in post-16 education
and training compulsory for students who did not achieve a
good GCSE pass at age 16. More broadly, we are reforming
both academic and technical education.
International examples of programme hours are widely used,
but those comparisons need to be carefully interpreted. It
is important that we understand what the estimates include,
how programmes of longer duration or higher intensity are
funded and how they sit beside other routes for young
people to take from school to work. It is not always clear
in the various studies where work experience is included in
the figures. Certainly in the planned hours used to
benchmark our own programmes for funding, we do not include
self-directed study or homework, which is a key part of
this phase of education. It is important that we develop a
system that serves our pupils and our economy.
In England, we have an established academic route for
sixth-form students through well-respected A-level
qualifications. It is true that our system requires pupils
to make choices and therefore, to a certain extent, to
specialise in a smaller number of subjects for the
sixth-form stage, but some degree of specialisation is a
feature of systems in other countries as well. Through the
A-level route, our academic system at post-16 is effective
in preparing pupils for successful futures through in-depth
study of the subjects they choose. We have some of the best
universities in the world, and the proportion of English
students studying in higher education is now higher than it
has ever been. That includes the highest ever entry rate
for the most disadvantaged 18-year-olds.
Of course, we are not standing still, and we are
strengthening the design of A-levels to make sure that
pupils continue to be fully equipped for the future. We
have given higher education providers a leading role in
redesigning a number of key A-levels, to ensure that pupils
who take these qualifications are prepared for
undergraduate-level study. We have also redesigned the
assessment model, increasing the time available for
high-quality teaching rather than taking exams.
Where we have not matched our neighbours is in technical
education, where we have a major programme of reform under
way. The landmark review of vocational education for 14 to
19-year-olds conducted by Professor in 2011 found that at
least 350,000 16 to 19-year-olds were working towards
vocational qualifications that offered no clear progression
routes. The review led to the introduction of new study
programmes and of per-student funding instead of
per-qualification funding to ensure fair funding for FE
colleges in line with other 16-to-19 institutions. As a
direct result of the recommendations in the Wolf report, we
now include only approved qualifications in performance
tables. This means that young people can have confidence
that their qualifications will enable them to progress to
further study or into employment.
However, we recognise that the system is still not doing
enough to support students who wish to pursue technical
education. We recognise that we are still not matching the
most effective systems of technical education in other
European economies. That is why, following publication of
the Sainsbury review, we are embarking on a radical reform
of England’s post-16 technical education system. Learning
from the best technical education systems overseas, we are
working to introduce new technical routes that will enable
young people to gain the knowledge and skills required for
work, according to standards designed in partnership with
employers. Bringing training for young people and adults in
line with the needs of business and industry will support
increases in productivity, which has lagged behind, even as
economic growth and employment levels have improved. It
will also help to ensure that young people and adults can
move into sustained and skilled careers that lead to
prosperity and security.
Alongside that, we are continuing the reform of
apprenticeships, as we have heard. We are increasing the
quality of apprenticeships through more rigorous assessment
and grading at the end of the apprenticeship. We are also
giving employers control of the funding so they become more
demanding customers. We are committed to reaching 3 million
apprenticeship starts in England by 2020.
-
I genuinely very much welcome the Minister’s support for
the sixth-form sector and sixth-form colleges, but he has
been speaking for nearly 10 minutes and has said nothing
about the arbitrary funding that has been the focus of so
much of the concern expressed on both sides of the House.
Will he commit to look at this funding issue? Will the
Government look at how much funding is required for the
rounded curriculum that sixth-form colleges want to
deliver? Colleges in my constituency, such as Varndean
College and Brighton, Hove & Sussex Sixth Form College,
are desperate to deliver it but are being undermined by the
lack of funding, which the Minister still has not really
addressed.
-
Mr Gibb
If only the hon. Lady had waited just two more seconds, we
would have come to that pivotal part of my response to the
debate.
Clearly, the right level of funding needs to be in place to
match our ambitious academic and technical reforms. In
2013, investment in education in the UK as a
whole—combining public and private sources—was above the
OECD average across all phases, including post-16. We have
made the system more coherent so that school sixth forms
and colleges are all funded and have their performance
reported in the same way. Funding is on a per-student
basis, giving schools and colleges the freedom to design
the best programmes for their students, rather than
rewarding institutions for providing large numbers of small
qualifications that have little value.
-
(Manchester Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
The Minister says that all institutions are treated the same,
but free schools, in particular, were outwith the area
reviews of provision that we have just seen undertaken in
many parts of the country. Is he aware of Connell Sixth Form
College in my constituency, which was opened by a grammar
school and has recently received a “requires improvement”
Ofsted rating? That sixth-form college is operating below the
numbers required to sustain it, and it was outwith the area
review. Does he think that is a good use of public funds in
the context of this debate?
-
Mr Gibb
Area reviews can take schools into account, but 2,000 or more
schools have sixth forms, and if we were to bring them all
into the area reviews, that would make the whole system
unmanageable. The free school system was introduced to
challenge the status quo in terms of sixth forms and in terms
of schools themselves, because in the past we have had
monopoly provision of new schools. The free school movement
has been phenomenal in opening up sixth forms such as King’s
College London Mathematics School, where 100% of youngsters
are getting A or A* grades in maths A-level, and Exeter
Mathematics School. These schools are challenging the status
quo in these areas and providing a very high-quality
education. We need to see more of those innovative and
demanding free sixth-form schools that open up for young
people opportunities that they would not otherwise have had.
-
I have been listening to the Minister very carefully. Does he
accept that the research available demonstrates that since
2010 the funding for 16 to 18-year-olds has been reduced in
real terms, and that the impact of that has been to reduce
the level of tuition time to 13 to 17 hours per student? I am
interested in whether he recognises that as an issue, and if
so, whether he sees it as a problem.
-
Mr Gibb
I absolutely recognise that resources are tight for 16-to-19
education and training. In recent years, we have had to make
some post-16 savings while working hard to sustain funding
levels for schools, bearing in mind the fact that success in
school pre-16 is the best predictor of outcomes in post-16
education.
We have made clear commitments to 16-to-19 education, where
we have protected the base rate of funding at £4,000 per
student for all types of providers until 2020. This was
announced in the 2015 spending review, at a time when public
finances are under great pressure. Providers receive
additional funding for students taking part in more expensive
programmes, and there is also a large programme uplift for
providers who have pupils studying four or more A-levels,
provided they achieve minimum grade requirements, and about
£540 million of funding is allocated each year to enable
schools and colleges to give extra support to disadvantaged
students. That is essential in helping those from poorer
backgrounds or those who, pre-16, have not attained well
enough to get the help they need to succeed.
Overall, we plan to invest about £7 billion during
2016-17—taking apprenticeships together with other education
and training options—to ensure that there is a place in
education or training for every 16 to 19-year-old who wants
one. This commitment means that all types of providers are
funded for 600 planned hours per year per full-time student.
That level of funding supports a significant programme of
study. For example, it will allow for three A-levels and 50
hours of tutorials, plus either one AS-level or about 150
hours of enrichment or work experience. While we have not
been able to protect budgets for sixth-form education in real
terms, there is funding to ensure that every sixth-form age
student has the opportunity to undertake high-quality study
that will help them to move on to skilled work or further or
higher education.
Our commitment to the post-16 sector has contributed to the
current record-high proportion of 16 to 18-year-olds in
education, training or apprenticeships, and the lowest
proportion of young people not in education, employment or
training since consistent records began in 1994. Applications
to higher education from 18-year-olds are at an all-time
high.
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Scunthorpe for raising
this important issue. I recognise that there is more to do to
continue improving our post-16 education system to ensure it
is established as one of the world’s best, but we should be
proud of the achievements so far and recognise that we are
building a system that is both affordable and in keeping with
our country’s needs.
Question put and agreed to.
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