Shake-up to technical education to be confirmed amid major investment in skills at Budget
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· Budget to prioritise the
next generation, helping young people get the skills they need to
secure better-paid, higher-quality jobs
· £500 million of
investment every year will be committed to increase
training for 16-19 year olds A radical investment to implement the
most ambitious post-16 education reforms since the introduction of
A-levels 70 years ago...Request free
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A radical investment to implement the most ambitious post-16 education reforms since the introduction of A-levels 70 years ago will be placed at the heart of this week’s Budget.
The Chancellor, Philip Hammond will recognise that as the UK prepares to leave the EU, it is more important than ever that young people are ready and able to make the most of the opportunities ahead.
To give them the skills they need to secure the high-paid, high-skilled jobs of the future, he will announce a series of reforms to technical education, backed by over £500 million per year. This will be underpinned by a transformation of the confusing current system of technical education, which is made up of around 13,000 separate qualifications. It will be replaced with a much more streamlined model of 15 world class routes that better suit the needs of students and businesses.
The government will work with employers and colleges to design these routes, from construction to creative based design professions, so that when young people leave college they have the skills, knowledge and expertise that employers want, as the Prime Minister’s modern Industrial Strategy boosts opportunities and spreads them to all sections of society and all regions of the country.
The new announcements also take the next step in the government’s plans to tackle weaknesses in the UK’s productivity levels – which the Chancellor will reiterate, is the only sustainable way to improve living standards for families up and down the country.
They will help deliver a vision to have two genuine routes of equal footing to develop world class skills for young people; either via a well-established academic route or a technical skills route with a new and improved upgraded system – helping to build an economy that works for everyone.
By pressing ahead with these reforms, the Chancellor will confirm that the government will deliver in full the recommendations of Lord Sainsbury’s review on Technical Education. These include:
The Chancellor will also recognise that people should have the chance to retrain and upskill at all points of their lives and the Budget will set out further steps to support this, including:
Notes for Editors There is a strong rationale to increase the technical skills of our young people:
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