Julian Sturdy (York Outer) (Con) I beg to move, That
this House has considered the introduction of an agriculture GCSE.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gapes,
I think for the first time. As Members may recall from previous
debates, my professional background is in agriculture; I draw
Members’ attention to my declaration in the Register...Request free trial
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(York Outer)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the introduction of an
agriculture GCSE.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gapes,
I think for the first time. As Members may recall from
previous debates, my professional background is in
agriculture; I draw Members’ attention to my declaration in
the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. My background
and experience have naturally made me a passionate advocate
for UK farming. British agriculture is the essential
foundation of the UK food and drink industry, which as our
largest single manufacturing sector employs one in eight
people and contributes more than £100 billion to the economy
each year, including through a growing volume of exports.
Farming also plays a vital role in protecting our
environment, maintaining and conserving the land, soil and
landscapes that make up our precious natural heritage.
So why a GCSE in agriculture? One of the foremost functions
of our education system is to equip young people with the
necessary skills to contribute to the social and economic
life of our country. I firmly believe that, given the
significance of agriculture to our economy, environment and
society, the education system should ensure that the younger
generation are able to flourish in the sector, and should
give them the option of doing so at the earliest possible
opportunity by offering an agricultural GCSE in schools
across England and Wales.
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(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the hon. Gentleman for securing this debate. Bearing
in mind that the average age of farmers in the UK is
approaching 60, does he agree that a new lease of life is
needed and that the GCSE will give those who are perhaps not
from a farming background but who have a love of the land the
opportunity to gain an understanding and to get involved in
farming? We in Northern Ireland have done that so far.
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I entirely agree with the hon. Gentleman. I have not quite
reached the farmer’s average age yet, which is around 59 at
the moment. I was going on to mention that Northern Ireland
already has a GCSE in agriculture, which started in 2013.
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(North Herefordshire)
(Con)
I really hope the Minister will answer this when she responds
later: why is it good enough for GCSEs to be provided to
young people in Northern Ireland, but not in North
Herefordshire?
-
It is up to the Minister to respond to that, and I hope she
does, but I do not want to see a GCSE in agriculture only in
North Herefordshire. I want to see it in England and Wales
and perhaps Scotland as well.
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(Angus) (Con)
We do not have a national 5 in agriculture in Scotland, so it
would be a positive move to introduce it there and to get
further behind apprenticeships as well, so that students have
room to develop from national 5 into an apprenticeship when
they leave school.
-
I entirely agree with my hon. Friend, who makes a valuable
point.
My support for the agriculture GCSE is based on two central
arguments: first, the course would offer great benefits to
GCSE pupils in helping to equip them for a skilled and
fulfilling career that agriculture can offer; and secondly,
it would support the farming sector by providing a better
and larger pool of young, educated and skilled workers. I
have already mentioned Northern Ireland. It is important to
re-emphasise that Northern Ireland has had a GCSE in
agriculture since 2013. I could not get the figures, but I
would be interested to know what the take-up has been in
Northern Ireland.
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My hon. Friend will find that 17 schools already offer the
GCSE in Northern Ireland, with an average of 10 students
per class. Agriculture, horticulture and animal care is the
fastest growing degree subject, with an increase in
applications of 117%, so clearly the demand is there.
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I am glad my hon. Friend has brought those figures to this
debate. I can always rely on him to bring facts to the
table. It is also worth mentioning that there is an
opportunity for those who are privileged enough to have the
advantage of taking an IGCSE qualification in agriculture
offered by Cambridge Assessment, but it is clear that
opportunities are limited to a small cohort of students in
the UK, so I do not think that that really qualifies. We
have to make sure that it is offered right across the
board.
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(North Cornwall)
(Con)
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for securing this debate.
Does he envisage the GCSE being provided in secondary
schools or will he broaden his remit to encourage
organisations such as the Duchy College in my constituency
to provide the GCSE, so that the college can broaden its
remit?
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My hon. Friend makes a valid point. It is important to
ensure that all education facilities have the opportunity
to offer a GCSE in agriculture. It should be available to
all—that is the premise of the argument—and not a limited
few.
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Dr (Stroud) (Lab/Co-op)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way very briefly?
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Very briefly.
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Dr Drew
The hon. Gentleman is being very generous. I actually
taught rural studies, although I look too young. Does he
accept that the wider rural economy is crucial to the
relationship between agriculture and the rural hinterland?
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Again, I entirely agree. I will go on to mention that this
is not just about agriculture. The wider rural economy, the
environment and food security link back to agriculture and
food production.
I understand that the Department for Education has recently
introduced changes to secondary qualifications and wants a
time to allow those to settle down, but a model exists for
how to design and teach the subject at GCSE level, which
suggests it would be straightforward for the Government to
make it available. Has there been any consideration of
replicating the content of the GCSE syllabus available to
those in Northern Ireland for students in Britain?
I have been sympathetic to an expansion in GCSE options for
some time, but I was encouraged to argue for this more
publicly by the intervention of the BBC “Countryfile”
presenter, Adam Henson, who publicly called for the
introduction of an agriculture GCSE in September last year.
He said,
“You can get a GCSE in religious studies and business, so
why not in agriculture?”
That is a fair question. A GCSE in agriculture has a strong
claim to feature among current non-core science and
mathematics options, which currently include geology,
astronomy and psychology. Expanding the offer to include
the option of a GCSE in agriculture would be a sensible and
logical development of the Government’s welcome plans to
expand the provision of vocational and technical education
in order to create a better skilled and more productive
workforce, enjoying higher wages and better living
standards. That is recognised in the Government’s
industrial strategy, which made the claim of
“putting the UK at the forefront of this global revolution
in farming.”
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(Gordon) (Con)
I am old enough to remember when there was an O-grade, or
an O-level, in agricultural science in Scotland—I am
substantially older than my hon. Friend the Member for
Angus (Kirstene Hair), who is far too young to remember it.
An agriculture GCSE has to be about food production and
what the countryside is really about, as opposed to the
countryside as a national park. The best thing that could
come out of it would be that people connect again with food
production and the countryside.
-
I entirely agree that it is about connecting with food
production, and ensuring that we understand where our food
comes from, how it works in the chain, the environmental
impacts, and how we manage production. I cannot say that I
am old enough to remember the O-level; my year was the last
to take O-levels, but I cannot remember having the
opportunity to take that one. The point is that we have to
ensure that we move forward, and the GCSE would be one way
of doing that.
I am watching with interest the development of plans for
T-levels, as a full technical alternative to A-levels, but
if there is truly to be the parity of esteem necessary to
boost the take-up of vocational and technical skills, the
option of a vocational or sector-linked qualification needs
to be offered to pupils as soon as possible, at the time
they first select the qualifications that they will
take—that is, at GCSE level. Have the Government considered
the effects of boosting the number of students taking the
agriculture, environment and animal care route from 2022 by
introducing a dedicated pre-16 qualification?
In Parliament, we are all familiar with employers saying
that schools do not do enough to prepare our young people
for the world of work. Offering an agriculture GCSE would
go some way to respond to those concerns, by allowing
pupils to equip themselves for work at an early age.
GCSE-age children could learn about a practical and
essential subject, directly linked to a varied and dynamic
field of employment.
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I thank the hon. Gentleman for giving way; he has been very
gracious. As we move towards leaving the EU on 31 March
next year, the opportunities for agri-food business to
increase across the whole world are magnificent and large.
Does the hon. Gentleman feel that now may be the time to
focus on them? There are opportunities in farming here, and
in exports overseas.
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I could not agree more with the hon. Gentleman; he makes
the point very well. As we move forward with Brexit, now is
the time to push the boundaries and take agriculture to new
levels. To do that, however, we will need the skills base
for the future, and we have to enthuse young people. A GCSE
in agriculture gives us a real opportunity to do that.
Sadly, there is plenty of evidence that young people do not
consider agriculture as a potential career path at the
moment, which is unfortunate considering its vital role in
the UK economy, and in addressing the huge global
challenges of world hunger, food security and environmental
conservation. Only 4% of UK workers would ever consider
farm work or going into agriculture. Statistics show that
about 20,000 students opt to study agriculture at
university each year. As my hon. Friend the Member for
North Herefordshire (Bill Wiggin) said, that is a growing
number, which is very encouraging. However, some 280,000
school leavers sign up for business-related degrees.
Introducing agriculture as an option early on, at GCSE
level, would give young people a chance to understand the
huge opportunities that the sector offers them, and would
do something to correct the imbalance.
The comparison with business studies in those statistics,
along with Adam Henson’s comments that I quoted earlier,
are important because it is essential that we remember that
farming is a business, and therefore offers exactly the
same opportunity for entrepreNEUrship and innovation as urban
enterprises, as well as addressing huge environmental and
humanitarian concerns. Moreover, it is a business sector
that will be at the forefront of unfolding technological
developments and exciting scientific advancements. A GCSE
option would be a useful way of alerting school pupils and
school leavers to those opportunities.
Agriculture is being, and will be, transformed by the
fourth industrial revolution, and it is important to alert
pupils and parents to the option of pursuing a career in a
high-tech, high-skill industry, utilising the latest
scientific innovations. School leavers entering the farming
sector in the next few years could expect to use GPS
technology to harvest wheat, to use driverless tractors, to
use drones to deliver herbicides to weeds on a precision
basis, to grow wheat with nitrogen-fixing bacteria, and to
use other new technologies that will drive up animal
welfare, such as robotic milking parlours. The industry
needs entrants with sound scientific understanding and
applied skills.
In the next few decades, robotics, biotechnology, gene
editing and data science will become increasingly
established in the farming sector. Our country is home to
some of the best agri-science research in the world, such
as at Rothamstead Research in Herefordshire—
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Hertfordshire.
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Sorry, Hertfordshire—once again, I thank my hon. Friend for
giving the correct details. Other examples include Fera
Science, just outside my constituency in North Yorkshire,
and Stockbridge Technology Centre in North Yorkshire. We
should be trying to fire the imaginations of our young
people by engaging them in the classroom with such examples
as soon as possible, just as we try to inspire pupils with
the achievements of British scientists and astronauts and
the richness of British cultural and literary achievements
in their science and English GCSE courses. The development
of indoor vertical farming using hydroponics will also
expand the opportunities for growing food in urban areas,
which could make agricultural knowledge just as relevant to
pupils in urban areas as in rural ones.
An agriculture GCSE would also encourage school- children
to grapple in a practical manner with the huge practical,
humanitarian and environmental challenge of global food
security. The growth of the global population means that,
as a world, we have to produce 70% more food over the next
30 years to keep pace with demand, and to ensure that
people do not go hungry. Moreover, we have to do so in an
environmentally sustainable way that makes the best use of
our finite resources.
The challenge is as significant in its own way as that of
climate change, and I argue that, like climate change, it
should be included in school curricula. Putting an
agriculture GCSE on the curriculum would also widen
opportunities for students, by giving them the option to
learn about a sector that relatively few of them will have
knowledge of, or have considered as a career choice. The
majority of farms are family businesses, mine being no
exception, and the routes to getting involved if someone is
not directly from a farming background can, sadly, be quite
limited. That is to the detriment of both the sector and
school leavers, who are restricted in their ability to get
a taste of a sector in which they could well thrive.
As chair of the all-party parliamentary group on science
and technology in agriculture, I was pleased to host the UK
and Ireland delegates to the global agricultural summit
here in Parliament last November. All the current entrants
were university students. I was hugely impressed by their
knowledge, their enthusiasm for the latest advances in
agriculture and their desire to contribute solutions.
However, what was most telling was that not a single one of
them had a family background in farming. They had all been
drawn to the sector by developing their own independent
interest and research into agricultural questions. That
certainly emphasised to me the capacity of agriculture to
challenge and inspire young people, but I would also
highlight that it is relatively rare for children to become
independently interested in it, which reinforces the value
of having the option at school so that they can make
informed choices on the basis of a comprehensive array of
available options.
As well as being of benefit to younger people, having an
expanded pool of educated and enthusiastic young people
would also be very useful for the sector and the wider UK
food and drink industry. As has already been mentioned, the
age of the farming workforce is ever increasing. Farming is
challenging and changing. In the race to keep up with the
pace, we need a high-skilled workforce entering the
industry with applied capabilities and an awareness of the
breadth of available opportunities. I commend the
Government for pushing ahead with a substantial reform to
post-16 education, but its effectiveness could be limited
if measures are not introduced to expand the opportunities
in secondary education to include a GCSE in agriculture.
I ask the Minister to look closely at this issue going
forward. There is a great opportunity for our economy, as
well as an opportunity to give young people the skills in
what is, to me, an incredibly vibrant and exciting sector.
11.22 am
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The Minister for Apprenticeships and Skills (Anne
Milton)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Gapes. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for York
Outer (Julian Sturdy) on securing this debate. He spoke
passionately and emphasised the need for people—not just
young people—to know about careers in all aspects of
farming. He also mentioned agri-tech. In my role as
Minister for Apprenticeships and Skills, I have met a
number of people in that sector about the opportunities. My
hon. Friend and I have spoken at length before about
grazing horses. This is a new subject for us to discuss,
and I heard everything he had to say.
I am mindful that with apprenticeships and T-levels there
is a tendency for the focus to be urban-based and for rural
areas to be forgotten. I assure my hon. Friend, as well as
the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) —who has now
left—my hon. Friends the Members for North Herefordshire
(Bill Wiggin), for Angus (Kirstene Hair) and for North
Cornwall (Scott Mann), and the hon. Member for Stroud (Dr
Drew), that I will not forget that, because it is
important.
My hon. Friend the Member for York Outer raised the issue
of food production across the world and the international
aspects of farming, which is equally important. It is also
important that the sector gets the workforce it needs. He
will be aware that a number of subjects taught at key stage
4 and earlier include some core knowledge about food
production and the environment. Those have been recognised
in the changes that have come about to GCSEs. There have
also been a number of changes to GCSEs that make the
content more rigorous. Whatever someone does after 16, it
is critical to have a good foundation in maths, English and
digital skills. My hon. Friend mentioned the importance of
understanding that farming is a business. Business skills
are important, and such skills are predicated on a solid
grounding.
In geography, for instance, pupils are expected to learn
about changing weather, climate change, global eco-systems,
biodiversity and resources, including an overview of how
humans use, modify and change those eco-systems and
environments in order to obtain food, energy and water. In
the nutrition GCSE, pupils are required to understand the
economic, environmental and socio-cultural influences on
food availability. That is quite important. There is also
content in some of the science GCSEs. I suspect that that
will not be enough to satisfy my hon. Friend the Member for
York Outer, or indeed my hon. Friend the Member for North
Herefordshire, who spoke with his usual passion, but
material in the core reformed subjects provides a general
background, which forms an important grounding in some of
the knowledge needed to go on and run a business.
Schools can also do outdoor learning and there is a certain
amount of freedom, which many schools use. I gather that
there are more than 100 schools with farms in the UK, a
fact I was not aware of. They bring pupils from both rural
and urban areas to understand a little bit more about
farming. Also, there is a City & Guilds technical
certificate in agriculture for 16 to 18-year-olds, so some
opportunities do exist. In addition, apprenticeships and
T-levels—technical education that will be on a par with
A-levels—will change the world. To some extent, it is in
the hands of hon. Members to go out into their schools to
highlight the opportunities that exist.
The first teaching of T-levels will start in September
2020, with the remainder launched in two phases in 2021 and
2022. The agriculture, environment and animal care route
will be rolled out in the second phase, which gives it a
degree of importance not afforded to all. The content of
the T-levels will be decided by employers, professionals
and practitioners, which will mean they have real market
relevance and real currency within the sector. We are
currently consulting on T-levels and I am sure the farming
sector and the broader agri-tech sector will have input.
My hon. Friend is right that early introduction to the
issues is important. I launched our careers strategy in
December last year. The strategy recognises that young
people’s interaction with work is absolutely critical—not
just doing work placements, but employers coming into
schools. There are now duties on schools to bring people in
and there are clear benchmarks about what they have to
achieve in terms of introducing young people to the wide
range of careers and the routes to getting there.
EntrepreNEUrial, talented new entrants are
needed to encourage the next generation of farmers.
There has been wide-scale reform of apprenticeships. There
will be some farmers who pay levies, but there are
opportunities even for small and medium-sized enterprises.
Apprenticeship standards for land-based service engineer
and land-based service engineer technician are already live
and a number of standards are in development, including
crop technician, farrier, poultry technician and
stockperson. The Institute for Apprenticeships is working
with employers to ensure that quality standards are high. I
recently met some students in a school for young people
with special needs. I was very impressed with the work that
they are doing to encourage those children, who are going
on to do level 2 apprenticeships in agriculture, farming
and animal care. It is very impressive.
We want to make sure that the sector has the right skills,
but what is absolutely critical is overcoming a not
insignificant degree of parental and teacher prejudice
about the options that are open for young people. It has
been a pleasure to have this debate. I am sorry I did not
have longer, but I assure my hon. Friend that I am on the
case. It is very important that the tendency with these
changes for an urban focus is spread out into rural
communities. National Apprenticeship Week is coming up. He
will have the opportunity—
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Will the Minister give way?
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Yes, briefly.
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It is critical that we have an academic qualification for
people in urban areas in this subject, rather than making
them do apprenticeships that they cannot reach because they
live in the towns.
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right, because it is also
about attracting people back into the countryside. One of
the issues for rural communities is that people leave and
go elsewhere. There are high-level qualifications too—it is
not just about levels 2 and 3; it is about levels 4 and 5.
The degree opportunities were mentioned, and degree
apprenticeships are really taking off. There is not much
not to like—
11.30 am
Motion lapsed, and sitting adjourned without Question put
(Standing Order No. 10(14)).
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