Peter Aldous (Waveney) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered Colleges Week 2024. It is a pleasure to serve with you
in the Chair, Sir Robert, and I thank the Backbench Business
Committee for granting this debate during Colleges Week, which runs
from Monday until tomorrow. I should also point out that I chair
the all-party parliamentary group for further education and
lifelong learning, the secretariat for which is provided by the
Association of Colleges,...Request free
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(Waveney) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered Colleges Week 2024.
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Sir Robert, and
I thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting this debate
during Colleges Week, which runs from Monday until tomorrow. I
should also point out that I chair the all-party parliamentary
group for further education and lifelong learning, the
secretariat for which is provided by the Association of Colleges,
to which I am grateful, among others, for the briefings and
support they have provided ahead of the debate.
This debate essentially falls into three parts: first,
celebrating the great work that colleges do all around the
country; secondly, highlighting where Government policy and
support are working; and thirdly, pointing out the areas where
more work and attention are required so that colleges can realise
their full potential for the benefit of the people and the
communities they serve.
It is important, first, to celebrate the great work that colleges
are doing. All around the UK, they are an essential part of our
education system. They are firmly embedded in their local
communities, where they are fully cognisant of the opportunities
and challenges and the strengths and weaknesses of their local
economies. They enable people of all ages and backgrounds to
realise their full potential. They are key players in boosting
local regeneration and levelling up and in eliminating the gaps
in skills and productivity, which are in danger of ever widening.
They also play a vital role in preparing people for the jobs of
tomorrow, which, all of a sudden, are with us today in areas such
as digital, artificial intelligence and the low-carbon
fields.
Colleges touch all our lives. English colleges educate 1.6
million students every year and employ approximately 103,000
full-time equivalent staff. Some 925,000 adults study or train in
colleges, and 608,000 16 to 18-year-olds study in colleges. The
average college trains 950 apprentices, and 100,000 people study
higher education in a college. Twenty-three per cent of 16 to
18-year-olds and 27% of adult students are from minority ethnic
backgrounds. Twenty-six per cent of 16 to 18-year-olds in
colleges have a learning difficulty or a disability, and 58,000
college students are aged 60 and over. In summary, colleges do
their job very well. Ninety-two per cent of colleges were judged
to be “good” or “outstanding” for overall effectiveness at their
most recent inspections. At times, however, colleges feel that
they are doing their job with one arm behind their backs, and I
shall touch upon that shortly.
I will briefly highlight the great work that East Coast College
does in Waveney. It now operates from two campuses, in Lowestoft
in my constituency and in Great Yarmouth in the constituency of
my right hon. Friend the Member for Great Yarmouth (Sir ). It fully understands the
challenges of coastal communities, the communities in which it is
deeply immersed, and works very closely with local authorities,
local businesses, the James Paget University Hospital, CEFAS—the
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, where
the Government’s marine scientists are based in Pakefield next to
Lowestoft—and the two universities that cover the area, the
University of East Anglia in Norwich and the University of
Suffolk, which has its headquarters in Ipswich but operates
across Suffolk.
In Lowestoft, East Coast College is an active member of the place
board, of which I am also a member, which has overseen the
projects carried out as part of the town deal. Its work focuses
on two areas: first, the need in the health and care sector to
support an ever growing elderly population. It has put in place
the Apollo project —not a journey to the moon, but a two-year
workforce programme designed to address recruitment and retention
challenges in the health and social care sector. Secondly,
opportunities are emerging in the energy sector. Among other
projects, there are the offshore wind farms anchored off the East
Anglian coast and the Sizewell C nuclear power project just down
the coast.
In recent years, significant capital improvements have been
carried out at East Coast College. Those include the Energy
Skills Centre in Lowestoft and the eastern civil engineering and
construction campus at Lound, midway between Lowestoft and Great
Yarmouth. At present, the college’s challenges centre more on
revenue funding, and its needs mirror those of the rest of the
sector, to which I shall now turn.
The good news is that, in recent years, there has been a
realisation of the vital role that colleges play in providing
people with the skills they need to realise their full potential,
to address regional inequalities and to ensure that the economy
fires on all cylinders. Some good initiatives have been put in
place, such as the lifelong learning entitlement, and funding has
improved, albeit from a low base. That said, significant
challenges remain; some are structural and long term, and others
derive from the cost of living crisis and the long and sharp tail
of covid.
The Local Government Association points out that
“the national employment and skills system is too
centralised”,
“short-term” in outlook, and that
“no single organisation is responsible or accountable for
coordinating programmes nationally or locally. This makes it
difficult to plan, target and join-up provision.”
It also identified that
“poor-quality, insufficient and fragmented CEIAG”—
careers education, information advice and guidance—
“is a persistent and key barrier to youth employment”,
notwithstanding the introduction, finally, of the Baker clause in
the Skills and Post-16 Education Act 2022.
The Edge Foundation focuses on the problem that is all around us:
the skills shortages that are getting worse. The shortages are
numerous and have grown significantly. The rate of skills
investment is in decline, and skills shortages have significant
costs for UK businesses, the economy and the environment. The
engineering sector is important to me locally, as engineering
skills will be much in need to fuel the transition to a
low-carbon economy. EngineeringUK, in its “Fit for the future”
engineering apprenticeships inquiry, has highlighted the
variability and quality of training provision and the problems in
recruiting teachers and trainers.
Colleges Week normally takes place in the autumn. This year,
however, for good reason, it has been brought forward to the
spring—not only so that it takes place in advance of the general
election campaign, to provide the sector with every opportunity
to set out its stall, but so that urgent representations can be
made ahead of next week’s Budget to meet many of the challenges
that I have highlighted.
I confess that I was expecting the Minister for Skills,
Apprenticeships and Higher Education, my right hon. Friend the
Member for Harlow (), to be here, but it is great
to see the Minister for Schools in his place, because he and I
have discussed this issue a great deal. I would be most grateful
if he conveyed some of these asks to my right hon. Friend the
Chancellor of the Exchequer in advance of his Budget statement
next Wednesday.
As I have mentioned, there are skill gaps across the country in
all sectors of the economy. To eliminate those gaps, I urge the
Government to invest the extra money raised from the immigration
skills charge to enable colleges to tackle the urgent priorities
identified by employers in the local skills improvement plans
that are now being rolled out across the country and those that
are found in relation to the increased number of skills shortage
vacancies revealed in the latest Department for Education
employer skills survey.
At the Conservative party conference in Manchester in October, my
right hon. Friend the Prime Minister rightly announced a 10-year
plan to give young people a better start in life through the
advanced British standard, with more hours, a broader curriculum,
and extra help for those who have struggled up to the age of 16.
Those ambitions are the right ones, but if they are to be
achieved —if there is to be any chance of having the teachers,
the trainers and the facilities in place to deliver them—we must
start investing now. To do that, three issues need to be
addressed.
First, the pay gap between those teaching in colleges and those
teaching in schools must be closed. It has been widening in
recent years and now stands at £9,000 per annum. That pay gap
cannot persist if the advanced British standard is to be a
success.
Secondly, colleges are disadvantaged when it comes to VAT. Unlike
for schools, VAT is not reimbursed for colleges—it cannot be
recovered. Colleges in England were reclassified as public sector
organisations back in 2022 and are now subject to all the
controls that apply to academies, but, unlike academies and
schools, they are unable to reclaim VAT under the refund scheme
in section 33 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994. That could be
addressed by amending that Act. The funds that would be released,
totalling around £210 million, could then be reinvested, helping
colleges to deliver the improvements to the school system that
the Government seek.
Thirdly, as I mentioned, covid has had a long and sharp tail,
impacting harshly on young people’s education. The Government
recognise that and are providing funding for tuition support to
help those with the greatest need to obtain the necessary
grounding in English and maths and to catch up on the vocational
courses where assessments were deferred. That is good news, but
the indications are that the demand for those lessons and courses
is still growing. It is estimated that approximately 40,000 more
students than last year need to resit their English GCSEs, with
20,000 needing to resit maths. I therefore urge the Minister to
do all he can to ensure that the funding for that tuition support
is extended.
I am reaching my conclusion, Sir Robert. I am sure that others in
this debate will refer to FE and colleges as being the Cinderella
of the education system. Indeed, that was right in the past, but
my sense is that all parties across the House have recognised the
error and folly of that. We are now, after a long time,
travelling down the right road, with the importance of vocational
learning as provided by colleges being acknowledged and accepted
by all. However, we are driving down this road in third gear and
we now need Government to provide resources, support and more
policies so that we can quickly and seamlessly move into top
gear. If we do that, we shall provide opportunity for many and
eliminate all those stubborn gaps that I have referred to a great
deal during this speech.
1.45pm
(Harrogate and Knaresborough)
(Con)
It is always a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Robert. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney
() on securing this Backbench
Business debate and on marking and celebrating Colleges Week.
I want to speak in support of the colleges of our nation, which
are such a significant part of our education system. My hon.
Friend outlined some powerful statistics when he was making his
case so eloquently a moment ago, but one in particular jumped out
at me, which is that more than 1.5 million students—1.6 million,
in fact —are educated at colleges in England every year.
Colleges play a critical role in delivering the skills that our
nation and our economy need. I visited many colleges some years
ago when I worked on apprenticeships, and they were great visits.
However, there is one feature from them all, which I want to draw
out and comment upon: the links between colleges and local
employers. Through those links, colleges not only provide the
workforce that companies need now, but develop the skills
programmes for the future.
We are seeing huge changes in the global economy, as countries
face the challenges of sectors and routes to market that are
going digital. There is also the overarching challenge of net
zero and the consequent decarbonising, and how that is creating
new skills, new industries and a requirement for significant
training. Colleges are at the forefront of meeting those
challenges through skills, based on partnerships and local
insight, through apprenticeships, with each college training 950
apprentices, as my hon. Friend mentioned, and through
professional development, as careers change and people of all
ages need to reskill as industries develop. Further, colleges are
training tens of thousands of people aged over 60. It is
therefore important to keep investing in these areas for our
future national prosperity.
The UK has not valued colleges enough over past decades. There
has been some kind of underlying assumption that the system
should really be focused on university degrees, which are right
for so many but not the only definition of excellence. I see
opportunity and excellence much more widely; I see it in our
college network. Spreading the word about the range of choices
that people have is one of the benefits of Colleges Week.
I should also congratulate the Minister on a policy change that
has quite recently put apprenticeships on the UCAS website. That
is a game changer. The feedback I have had from school and group
visits in Harrogate and Knaresborough is that that has been a
highly successful initiative and people have become aware of
apprenticeships. It has almost been like giving them a parity of
esteem, which has not been present before. It has certainly
boosted knowledge in a very positive way.
We are obviously here supporting colleges today, and my hon.
Friend the Member for Waveney has made a powerful case. It is
also fair to say, however, that colleges have not fully received
the attention that their success and scale merit. My hon. Friend
said colleges were formerly a Cinderella service. That might be a
little strong and people have woken up to that; however, Colleges
Week presents a great opportunity to pay tribute to all our
colleges and all that they achieve.
I want to highlight a major development taking place this week at
Harrogate College, and also to congratulate the team at Harrogate
College and the Luminate Education Group on their work on it.
That development is a £20 million scheme to replace the main
building at the college and construct a renewable energy skills
hub. In effect, there will be a totally new campus, which is very
exciting and a real game changer.
Preliminary work started this week and full construction starts
next month. Energy efficiency is being built in and will help the
college to deliver its plan to become carbon-neutral by 2035. The
upgrade will see state-of-the-art facilities on campus, including
a mock hospital ward, an electric vehicle workshop and a
construction centre that will focus on renewables and the
building methods of the future. Basically, that directly relates
to my earlier points about how important the links between
colleges and local companies are for the skills that are needed;
indeed, it is proof of the wisdom of that policy.
The college principal, Danny Wild, has kept me posted throughout
the development of this great project, and I was able to speak
with Ministers and do all that I could to help to get it over the
line. Of the total budget of £20 million, £16 million comes from
the Department for Education’s further education capital
transformation fund—and transformation is indeed what we are
talking about with this development. It will make Harrogate
College future proof—the college’s words—and consolidate its
position as the leading provider locally of T-levels. It is
anticipated that the new development will be open for students in
the summer of 2025, which really is not long for a project of
this scale and ambition.
Apart from providing better facilities for the students, this
development will send a major signal that Harrogate College and
all that it does are both aspirational and of the highest
quality. Basically, students will be equipped with the skills for
a new era. When we see college investment and college success, it
is not just about small initiatives at the college itself; the
economy of the entire area will benefit. We have a strong local
economy, but the companies within it often report difficulties in
filling vacancies—the unemployment rate locally is 1.8%. This
project will help to fill those vacancies, because it will help
to tackle skills shortages.
So I say well done to the Harrogate College team. I look forward
very much to visiting the college shortly, and I know that there
are positive developments right across the country. There is much
to celebrate all over the country, but I just wanted to highlight
and celebrate this local news. I look forward very much to
hearing what the Minister has to say about ensuring that this
sector is front and centre in our education system.
(in the Chair)
We now move to the Front-Bench wind-ups, starting with the
Opposition spokesman.
1.52pm
(Feltham and Heston)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Sir Robert, and
to speak in this debate.
It is right that we pay tribute to the hon. Member for Waveney
() for securing this debate. I
know that he is incredibly passionate about further education and
the skills sector, and he has raised a number of very important
issues, which I will address. I also acknowledge his work on the
all-party parliamentary group on further education and lifelong
learning—I am a passionate supporter of that group—and work of
the Association of Colleges, as the secretariat to the group.
I thank all our colleges up and down the country for the vital
contribution they make to our national skills system, and to
young people and adult learners across the country. In addition
to noting the support and advice from the Association of
Colleges, it is worth our reflecting on the support and advice
that comes from the Sixth Form Colleges Association, the
Association of Employment and Learning Providers, and our
qualification providers, including City & Guilds and others,
which have also played an important role in the Future Skills
Coalition. In addition, this week, FE Week and City & Guilds
put on the annual apprenticeships conference, which played an
important part in pulling everybody together during this
important week.
I acknowledge the contribution made by the hon. Member for
Harrogate and Knaresborough (), who made important points
about engagement with employers and about how Harrogate College
is helping to meet local skills and workforce needs. That is a
story that all our colleges could share, so it was good to hear
those examples.
The hon. Member for Waveney said that colleges play an important
role around the UK in our skills system and are firmly embedded
in our communities. They understand the needs of our local
economies, and have played an important role in the development
of our local skills improvement plans. Like many other college
leaders, Tracy Aust, the principal of West Thames College in
Hounslow, who also oversees the Feltham skills centre, has been
pivotal in pulling together those voices so that we can better
match the skills needs in our local economy with the provision
coming through our colleges. That also helps local authorities
and other players to develop a deeper understanding of the
community learning requirements.
In that context, our FE institutions truly stand as pillars of
knowledge and ambition, but they are also beacons of
adaptability. They work together to foster an environment that
encourages lifelong learning. One of the best parts of my role as
shadow Minister is going to colleges across the country to meet
and listen to learners and employers. That includes West Thames
College and the Feltham skills centre, which do important
wrap-around work on employability and mentoring. Logistics
apprentices from the Institute of Couriers are in Parliament
today to celebrate their achievements. I pay tribute to the
chairman of the institute, Carl Lomas, for all he does, with
great enthusiasm, including building links and investing in
colleges. The apprentices I saw today feel they know him
personally. Those relationships and that social capital around
our systems are really important.
I have spoken to students studying T-levels, apprenticeships and
higher technical qualifications, and adult learners upskilling,
at City and Islington College. I have spoken to people working
and learning at the National College for Nuclear, and health and
aerospace apprentices in Milton Keynes, Newcastle and Liverpool.
Last week, I visited South and City College in Birmingham to see
the important new facilities for robotics, electric vehicles and
so on. This is not just about connecting young people and adult
learners with the content of learning, but about giving them
hands-on experience with new technologies.
I am launching my colleges tour over the next few months, which
will focus on how we are engaging with small and medium-sized
enterprises in our communities and what the barriers are. SME
apprenticeship levels have been dropping significantly—they have
fallen by 49% since 2016—and we absolutely must turn that
around.
As a nation, our No. 1 priority is to grow our economy so that we
can invest in our public services and greater opportunities for
all. To achieve that ambition for growth, we need to invest in
human talent to grow our skills and our workforce across all
sectors where there are skill shortages. Colleges play an
important role in delivering skills for green infrastructure, our
creative industries, our life sciences sector, our public
services and our everyday economy, including hospitality. All
those things require workforces with specialised skills. It is
vital that people across our country have pathways into high-
quality vocational training, secure, enjoyable work, and
opportunities to upskill. I have talked to adult learners who
have told me that the qualifications they did five or 10 years
ago have left them out of date, compared with those coming
through the system now. Given that nine out of 10 adults are
likely to need some retraining in the next decade, that will be
an important part of all our futures.
Colleges are uniquely placed to deliver on this combined mission
of economic growth and improved life chances for all. They
provide an exceptionally diverse range of education and training
courses to meet the needs of local economies. They are centres of
lifelong learning for people of all ages and at all levels, as
the hon. Member for Waveney so effectively highlighted. But just
as it is important to acknowledge the successes of colleges this
week, we must also acknowledge the challenges they face, a number
of which were eloquently outlined by the hon. Member.
As examples, apprenticeship numbers have fallen, real-terms
funding for the further education sector has fallen to record
lows, and vital decision-making powers have been taken away from
local communities. The Conservatives have also overseen more than
a decade of decline in skills and training opportunities. I say
that because apprenticeship starts have fallen by 200,000 since
2017—it is important to recognise the figures. In every region,
apprenticeship starts have fallen since 2010, and small and
medium-sized enterprise engagement with apprenticeships has
fallen by 49% since 2016.
(Worcester) (Con)
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for giving way. I apologise to the
Chair, as I will not be able to stay to the end of the debate as
I have a meeting with the head of the Universities and Colleges
Admissions Service to talk about progression and issues of this
sort.
With apprenticeships, it is very important that we compare like
with like. It is a great thing that all apprenticeships now
involve a year of work and a qualification. That was not the case
under the last Labour Government.
I want to put on the record my tribute to the Heart of
Worcestershire College and the Worcester Sixth Form College, for
the fantastic work they do. I commend to both Front Benches the
report from the Education Committee on post-16 qualifications,
which made a number of recommendations, including increasing the
number of youth apprenticeships and setting a target for the
proportion of apprenticeships that lead people into work.
I thank the hon. Member for his contribution and for sharing the
work of the colleges in his area, with which I know he is well
connected. I acknowledge his work as Chair of the Education
Committee, including on that report.
It is important that we are clear about the figures, but it is
also important to recognise that things have got harder,
particularly for small businesses, since the implementation of
the levy. We need to address those challenges. For level 2 and
level 3 apprenticeships, the numbers are falling in proportion to
apprenticeships as a whole—these are challenges that the
Education Committee has rightly highlighted. It is important to
make sure that there are pathways post-16 for those who may not
have the same qualifications at GCSE. That is a point I will
refer to further in my remarks.
It is also true that the Government are on track to miss the 67%
achievement rate, with almost half of apprenticeships not being
completed. There are a range of reasons for that. Level 2 and
level 3 apprenticeships have seen some of the worst falls; there
has been a 69% fall in the number of starts at level 2 and a 21%
fall in the number of starts at level 3. In addition, too many
young people and adult learners say they are not aware of the
opportunities available to them. Colleges have also seen
real-terms funding cuts under successive Tory Governments. Since
2010, spending per pupil has fallen by 14% in colleges and 28% in
school sixth forms.
Labour will put colleges at the heart of our plans for breaking
down barriers to opportunity and boosting Britain’s skills.
Central to that is our plan to develop technical excellence
colleges, enabling colleges in local skills improvement plan
areas to specialise in the particular needs of their local
economies and businesses, driven by LSIP priorities. We know that
Whitehall does not have all the answers for what is needed in our
local communities. That is why we will continue to build on the
already begun process of devolving and combining power and
budgets for skills and adult education to combined authorities
and local areas, so that the right decisions and right priorities
are led by those with the most local information, who are in the
right places.
These plans will empower FE colleges to take a lead in responding
to local needs. We see it as important that we reform the
apprenticeship levy to become, in part, the growth and skills
levy, giving businesses and employers the flexibility they need
to invest in skills and training and to continue to support SMEs
to take up apprenticeships, too. An estimated £3 billion in
unspent levy has gone to the Treasury since 2019 that could have
been spent on more training opportunities for learners and,
through that, on training providers too, supporting capacity to
grow the sector. The system is not working as it needs to be.
Bringing more flexibility is a policy backed by the Manufacturing
5, the British Retail Consortium, techUK, the Co-operative Group,
City & Guilds—the list goes on.
It is vital that young people are aware of their post-16 options
so that they know which routes are open to them and how to take
them. That is why Labour wants to train more thsn 1,000 new
professional careers advisers. I recognise the point made by the
hon. Member for Waveney about fragmented advice and guidance, but
we want to train those new advisers for students in our colleges
and schools and introduce two weeks of compulsory work experience
for every student to connect them earlier with the workplace.
There are real concerns about the chaotic roll-out of T-levels
and the phasing out of many overlapping qualifications among
college staff and young people—a serious issue that has been
raised with me. The Protect Student Choice campaign estimates
that 155,000 students could be left without an appropriate course
of post-16 study if the Government go ahead with these plans in
this way. That is why Labour will ensure that all students are
able to complete their qualifications and will pause and review
the proposed removal of courses until we can be sure that these
reforms will not prevent young people from pursuing high-quality
vocational qualifications.
In conclusion, boosting Britain’s skills will be a national
ambition for Labour, led by our new body Skills England, which
will help provide that overarching national skills framework,
connecting that with regional and local need, and will bring
together businesses, training providers and unions to meet the
skills needs of the next decade across all our regions. I am
proud to say that colleges will be at the heart of that
ambition.
2.07pm
The Minister for Schools ()
It is a great pleasure to see you in the Chair, Sir Robert. I
join colleagues in congratulating my hon. Friend the Member for
Waveney () on securing this debate in
Westminster Hall on this important subject. He rightly mentioned
that he and I have talked about these topics many times over—I
think it is fair to say—many years. I know he has a fervent
passion for and deep knowledge of the subject, and I thank him
for what he does with the all-party parliamentary group on
further education and lifelong learning. I join him in thanking
and congratulating the Association of Colleges. Like many
colleagues, I had the opportunity earlier this week to go over
the road—the other side of Parliament Square—to the AOC awards
event. It was great to meet an award winner from my local college
in Alton and its other campus in Havant, but also to see the huge
variety of people benefiting from all that colleges have to
offer. Both my hon. Friend and my hon. Friend the Member for
Harrogate and Knaresborough () spoke with passion about the
importance of colleges and the great work they do in educating
and training people of all ages and backgrounds, as well as the
key role they play in communities. They rightly talked about the
challenges they face, and I do not argue with any of that.
I am the Minister for Schools, but I still know there is no more
important subject than colleges. I see every day that we have
great schools educating our children, giving them a great
education and grounding to take them on whatever path they choose
at age 16. Of course, we also have strong higher education
institutions, delivering world-class higher education to young
people and equipping them with the high-level education and
skills they need. We then have further education colleges, which
are the filling—if you like—in the education sandwich. Like the
best sandwich options, there is a variety to choose from because
colleges do just about everything, including all the things I
have just mentioned. They do basic skills, English and maths and
so-called level 3 provision. More recently, there has been the
introduction of T-levels. They do apprenticeships, as we have
been talking about, and I will come back to adult learning. As my
hon. Friend the Member for Waveney reminded us, FE colleges also
do HE, as well as pre-16 provision for certain groups of young
people. To cap it all, some colleges even have their own
nursery—they are really providing the full range of education. We
are not talking about jacks of all trades, because they do not
just do lots of things; they do them very well. The latest
figures show that approximately 92% of colleges were judged to be
good or outstanding at their most recent inspection, which is
quite an incredible figure.
The Secretary of State and the Minister for Skills,
Apprenticeships and Higher Education visit colleges around the
country frequently. I should say, by the way, that the latter
would have loved to be here today. He phoned me this morning to
say so, and to ask me to pass on his best wishes, in particular
in celebration of Colleges Week. He is not able to physically be
in two places at once; otherwise, he would have been here. The
Secretary of State and the Minister meet staff and students and
see at first hand some of the excellent work they are doing, as I
have had the opportunity to do in previous roles in the DFE. They
are astounded by the range and breadth of high-quality provision
on offer in fantastic facilities.
My hon. Friend the Member for Waveney rightly alluded to another
key role that FE colleges carry out, which is acting as agents of
social mobility. Many learners in FE come from disadvantaged
backgrounds, so our colleges are essential for ensuring that
individuals from all backgrounds are supported to progress into
employment or further learning. It is fair to say that for many
years, colleges were unsung heroes, doing fantastic work without
ever really getting commensurate recognition for that work. That
has changed now, because everybody understands and recognises the
importance of what they do. This debate is a great example of
that recognition.
The skills agenda, in which colleges play a critical role, is one
of my Department’s key priorities. Colleges are delivering our
radical skills reforms, helping individuals with basic skills
needs right up to challenging the highest performers to reach
their potential, raising the stages of technical education
through the delivery of apprenticeships and the introduction of
rigorous T-levels.
It is easy for us to say that colleges are great, and that we
recognise all they do, but we need to back that up with support
and investment. That is why we are making major investment in
post-16 education, in which colleges play a huge part, with an
additional £3.8 billion over this Parliament for education and
skills. In particular, throughout this Parliament, we have
consistently increased overall funding for 16-to-19 education
year on year, including an extra £1.6 billion in 2024-25 compared
with 2021-22—the biggest increase in 16-to-19 funding in a
decade. FE colleges, like all 16-to-19 providers, have benefited
from that investment. We are investing £3 billion in capital
between 2022 and 2025 to improve the condition of the post-16
estate, deliver new places in post-16 education, provide more
specialist equipment and facilities for T-levels and deliver
institutes of technology.
We recognise that the issues colleges are facing are not just
about whether they have enough funding and how to make the
funding stretch to deliver everything they need to do, but about
systems, procedures and bureaucracy. Colleges have told
Government that we need to address those things, and we have
listened. That is why we have consulted on reforming the further
education funding and accountability systems, and last year
issued our response. We have committed to simplifying funding
systems and creating a single adult skills fund and a single
development fund. We have already started delivering on those
commitments and will continue this work to reduce the bureaucracy
associated with funding. We have set out a much clearer approach
to support an intervention for colleges, and will also remove
duplicative data collection and take steps to simplify and
improve audit. All these things will help to minimise burdens on
colleges and let them focus their efforts on delivering that
excellent education and training.
Of course, FE would not be what it is without teachers and
teaching. The quality of teaching and leaders is the biggest
determinant of outcomes for learners, and that is why we are
investing £470 million over the financial years 2023-24 and
2024-25 to support colleges and other providers, and to address
key priorities, including on recruitment and retention. That
funding has already fed through to colleges and other providers
via increased 16-19 rates and programme cost weight increases
from last September.
It is part of a wider programme to support the sector to recruit
excellent staff. That includes a national recruitment campaign to
strengthen and incentivise the uptake of initial teacher
education, teacher training bursaries and the Taking Teaching
Further training programme. We also announced £200 million to
improve teacher recruitment and retention by giving those who
teach key shortage subjects a payment of up to £6,000, tax-free,
per year in the first five years of their career. For the first
time, that applies to those teaching eligible subjects in all FE
colleges.
Let me turn to some of the comments made by the hon. Lady who
speaks for the Opposition, the hon. Member for Feltham and Heston
(). This debate has not been
primarily party political, and nor should it be. We are
celebrating Colleges Week, and that is something on which
colleagues right across this House agree. I welcome a number of
the things that the hon. Lady said, but there are a couple that I
cannot quite let go, particularly on the subject of
apprenticeships.
My hon. Friend the Member for Worcester (Mr Walker) was quite
right in saying that, if we are going to talk about
apprenticeships, we must talk like for like. I am afraid that,
before 2010, there were some people who, when asked about the
quality of their apprenticeship, did not know that they were on
an apprenticeship. We have changed that and underpinned the
apprenticeships programme with guarantees of quality: the minimum
length of the course; the minimum amount of time in college; the
creation of the Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical
Education; and, critically, employer-designed standards. That has
made a very solid set of very high- quality apprenticeships. I
would urge the hon. Lady and her party not to pursue the plans
and policy that they appear to be—not to undermine those
apprenticeships or have fewer of them, and instead create a new
quango.
I thank the Minister for his comments, and we do not need to get
into a debate today—there are many other opportunities for that.
He is right that it is important that we do not create dividing
lines where we do not have them, in an area that needs both
stability and long-term planning, but I want to challenge him on
the point he has made. It is true that apprenticeships starts
have fallen, and I am not saying that we have not also supported
some changes through the passage of time. However, we all know
that there are challenges, such as employer involvement in
start-ups, employer fatigue due to the difficulties with the
current apprenticeship system and the drop in SME engagement, and
it is really important that the Government acknowledge those
challenges.
It is also important not to misrepresent Labour’s call for a
reform where employers, if they so chose, could spend up to 50%
of their apprenticeship levy more flexibly. Too much of that levy
is being returned to the Treasury because employers are unable to
spend it on any learning. For most employers, the reform would
not make much of a difference because they are only able to spend
about 50% of their levy, and that would not change. Perhaps the
Minister might also know that, if we see more growth in the
economy, we will also see more of the levy coming in and greater
apprenticeships there too.
Again, let us not have a party political debate—that is not the
nature of this discussion today. I can absolutely assure the hon.
Lady that I have not misrepresented the Labour party’s policy in
the slightest. She then went on to repeat it, which is to say
that there would be less money guaranteed to be available for
apprenticeships. That would surely lead to a move away from those
high-quality apprenticeships that I mentioned. I understand the
attraction of voices saying that the levy is not a good way of
doing things, but I have to tell the hon. Lady that it addresses
a fundamental problem—
Will the Minister give way?
Absolutely, and I will come back to the fundamental problem in a
moment.
I thank the Minister again, but I think he does not fully
understand the Labour policy and that may be because he has not
engaged with it in detail. The point on the growth and skills
levy is that the opportunity to spend on more modular courses and
more flexible learning, creating the opportunity to build
qualifications through more modular approaches, could support
more engagement with learning and contribute to a reduction in
the early ending of apprenticeships, where the targets of
apprenticeship completion are not even being met. That is a real
issue.
I assure the hon. Lady that if there is any misunderstanding
about the Labour party’s policy, it is not because people have
failed to engage with it; it is because it is not clear—and one
great benefit of our apprenticeship system is that it is clear.
The approach of the apprenticeship levy resolves one of the
fundamental questions of investing in human capital, training and
people, which is the so-called free rider problem.
For many years, some employers invested strongly in their
workforces and then some of the members of those workforces,
after a couple of years of training, would get up and go to the
competitor. The levy is precisely to make sure that the whole of
our economy and the whole of industry has a like interest in
developing those skills and developing investing in the potential
of people. I advise the hon. Lady to be careful in deciding to
get rid of that and replace it with a new and unneeded
quango.
I turn to my hon. Friend the Member for Harrogate and
Knaresborough, who also spoke about the centrality of
apprenticeships and the quality of them. He spoke about the
importance of colleges to the whole local economic area. I too
represent an area with a particularly low level of unemployment,
even though unemployment across the country is low compared with
historical norms—it is at slightly less than half the level it
was when I and my hon. Friends the Members for Harrogate and
Knaresborough and for Waveney came into Parliament in 2010.
Particularly in areas of even lower unemployment, however, skills
matching becomes vital for the local economy. I also join my hon.
Friend the Member for Harrogate and Knaresborough in
congratulating both Harrogate College and the Luminate Education
Group on their work on the renewable energy skills hub. That is a
great example of colleges being future-looking, forward-looking
and innovative, making sure we are equipped with the skills for
the future and creating facilities that contribute to that.
I come now to my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney, who has
brought us to this Chamber today—and we are all grateful to him
for doing so. He listed some of the several ways in which
colleges are vital to our economy and society. He too spoke of
the importance of colleges in their local communities. He
reminded us that that is about people of all ages—including those
who might not have had that great an experience coming through
education the first time, who can have another chance, and those
who had a fantastic experience the first time around, who can
further develop their skills. It is also about the jobs of
tomorrow and making sure we can continue to adapt and that in so
doing we offer social mobility to people throughout the
country.
My hon. Friend also talked about productivity, which is so
important here. We know that there has long been a big
productivity gap—since the year I was born and beyond, and I am
54—between this country and the United States and Germany in
particular. It has improved, but it is still a gap and we need to
move further. Making sure we can match skills to where they are
needed and hone those skills is incredibly important.
My hon. Friend also spoke about the importance of colleges
themselves as big employers in local areas, and we should never
forget that. He also discussed the importance of working with
employers, a subject also covered by our hon. Friend the Member
for Harrogate and Knaresborough. In particular, I note the work
of Suffolk New College in leading on the local skills improvement
fund for my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney’s area. Indeed, I
pay tribute to all three colleges serving his local area—East
Coast College, Suffolk New College and West Suffolk College.
We are getting close to a fiscal event, and my hon. Friend quite
rightly put in his Budget bids, which will have been heard. He
also talked about some of the progress made. I agree that the
value of the Baker clause is not just what it does directly, but
the symbolism and the message it gives that all children should
know about the full range of what is available to them at the age
of 16. Some of those children will be better suited to going to a
school sixth form, some will be better suited to going to a sixth
form college and some will be better suited to going to an FE
college. Some will be better suited to a largely academic route
and some will be better suited to a technical and vocational
route. Having those options made known at a suitable time in that
journey is really important.
There are also T-levels. Of course, colleges are not the only
places that deliver T-levels, but they are at the centre of that
great reform. They offer more hours in college and bring English,
maths and digital skills right into integration with the core
vocational subjects and, crucially, the nine-week or 45-day
industrial placement. When I meet employers or young people who
have done T-levels, that is the thing they always talk about the
most: the opportunity to apply what they learn in college
directly in a workplace and develop the workplace skills that we
know are so valued by employers. By the way, they bring an
opportunity to see a young person in action in the workplace for
an extended period.
There are the higher-level technical qualifications and the
advanced British standard, which is in development now. My hon.
Friend the Member for Waveney was quite right that we are
developing that landmark reform to remove fully the artificial
divide between the academic and the vocational. In doing that, we
need to start investing now—and we are investing now. That is
such an important point to make, and it is understood across
Government.
When people think about a college, probably the first thing that
comes into their head is a picture of a building, but my hon.
Friend and I, and everyone here, know that it is all about
people. That is why those investments in people are so important,
including the extension of the levelling-up premium to further
education colleges for the first time. The Teach in FE
recruitment campaign is running, and there is the Taking Teaching
Further programme. We know that there is a particular importance
to, and sometimes a challenge in, getting people with recent
industrial experience—those “on the tools”—into college to impart
those skills onwards. There are FE teacher training bursaries
worth up to £30,000, depending on the subject, tax-free, in the
academic year 2024-25.
I will close by thanking everybody who has taken part in this
debate, particularly our hon. Friend the Member for Waveney for
tabling it and convening this important discussion. It was
informative to hear from him and others about local issues,
successes and, of course, how much we value our colleges—“Love
our Colleges”, to coin a phrase from Colleges Week. The one clear
thing coming from this debate is that we all recognise the
importance, value and role of our colleges, as the strapline that
I just mentioned makes clear.
I have set out how we are backing our recognition of colleges
through investment and support by increasing funding, investing
in facilities and estate, reforming accountability and funding to
reduce burdens and investing in programmes to support and boost
the further education workforce. I hope and believe that those
things will benefit colleges and support them to deliver. I know
that we ask colleges to deliver a lot these days, but that is
because we know that they can and do deliver incredibly well.
2.29pm
I am a shade disappointed, not by the quality of the debate but
because there was high demand to take part and we have not had as
many colleagues as I would have hoped for. There are loads of
demands on people’s time. However, what we have lacked in
quantity, we have made up for in quality. I am the odd person out
in this debate; I am the only participant who has not had a
Front-Bench role, so it has been interesting to hear the views of
those on the frontline.
The three of us on the Government Benches—I, my right hon. Friend
the Member for East Hampshire () and my hon. Friend the Member
for Harrogate and Knaresborough ()—have all been here since
2010. Colleges are in a better place, generally speaking, than in
2010, particularly in terms of the quality of their estate. That
has certainly improved, but we need to move on. While the shiny
new buildings are important, we need the teachers and trainers to
be able to help with the learning in those colleges. That is
where we have a particular problem. Look at the energy sector
that East Coast College is having to deal with: we have a crying
need for welders and fabricators, but there is a real challenge
in getting those teachers and trainers.
Lord Baker fought for the Baker clause for years. He took too
long to get it, but he got it. At some stage, I would welcome
some information on how it is going down in practice, because
when I go around the community I represent, I cannot say, “Ah!
That is a result of the Baker clause.” If we pull a lever in this
place, it does not automatically lead to a gear change in the
rest of the country.
The one disagreement we have had is on the issue of apprentices.
If one looks at where we were in 2010 and where we are today, we
are generally in a better place, but the journey has not been
smooth—there have been ebbs and flows along the way. I am
slightly confused by some of the statistics. It may be that we
were in a better place two or three years ago than today. One of
the challenges is to get SMEs properly involved in the
apprenticeship system.
That brings us on to the levy. The levy is a great idea, and the
Government were right to introduce it, but there have been
teething difficulties and challenges with money being returned to
the Treasury. The Opposition spokesperson, the hon. Member for
Feltham and Heston (), and I have been in events
where I have said that we need to press ahead with a review now,
rather than waiting for next year after all the hullabaloo of the
election. It must take place now, so that we can iron it out and
get it on the right journey.
Finally, here are my funding asks of the Chancellor. This is
ultimately about ensuring a level playing field. Colleges are not
on a level playing field with schools and academies when it comes
to VAT. They are not on a level playing field when it comes to
what teachers are paid.
At the beginning of the time that I have spent in this place,
there was the problem of colleges having to pick up the pieces
for young people who, for whatever reason, had not acquired basic
literacy and numeracy skills in secondary education. That
situation has improved dramatically, but covid has thrown a big
spanner in the works and the colleges are having to work very
hard to address that. It is not going to go away immediately, and
that is why they need those funds to be extended.
Sir Robert, thank you for bearing with me for a few extra
minutes. It has been a good debate.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered Colleges Week 2024.
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