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POST 16 EDUCATION A. Analysis of current provision;
B. Vision for the Future;
C. Current Issues
A. .Analysis of current provision1. The opportunity to continue in education after reaching school-leaving age varies according to social class and previous attainment. School Sixth Forms (both state and private) and Selective Sixth Form Colleges cater for those who have already been successful at school and usually only provide academic (ie. A level) courses. Children from wealthy and middle class families mainly stay on at school or attend Selective Sixth Form Colleges. Those who have been less successful and all those who want to follow vocational courses are directed to “Widening Participation” Sixth Form Colleges or to FHE Colleges, which are inclusive institutions and cater for the majority of young people in full or part-time education after 16. They are, however, less well funded than state schools teaching the same courses, which in turn are far less well funded than Independent or Public Schools. A2. The introduction of maintenance allowances for 16 –18 year olds staying on from poor families has been one of the achievements of the Labour Government, but the participation rate of 17 year olds is still the lowest in the developed countries of Europe. There is a major problem because many young people, mainly but not exclusively from the bottom two social classes, are becoming alienated from education during compulsory secondary education. A.3. The Tomlinson Report sought to eliminate the division of the examination structure into academic and vocational examinations, catering to different groups of children. Instead the Government has retained “A” levels alongside its new diplomas, and has encouraged further streaming by promoting work-based vocational education for 14-16yr.olds. So middle class children continue to be tied to a narrow academic curriculum and those from lower social classes are being pushed into a vocational direction even before the end of compulsory schooling. A4.
The class divide is even more clear-cut at post 19: 80% of children
from Classes I and II now attend universities compared with only 20%
from Classes IV and V, despite all the efforts to widen access to
universities in the last thirty years. The domination of the middle
and upper classes is even more pronounced in the old universities
– particularly, Oxford, Cambridge and the other members of the Russell Group. The new universities
have taken the lead in widening access to students from the lower
social classes and other non-traditional applicants. Such students
have also benefited from opportunities for degree-level study at FE
and HE Colleges. A5
The distinction about the content of education between
“academic” and “vocational” is at a theoretical level even
more deep-seated in post-19 education. University education is seen
to promote personal development and leadership qualities, whereas
study at FHE colleges is seen as training for employment. The recent
Leitch Report focuses far too narrowly on employers’ needs and
skills training and ignores the need for general education for
everyone, not just those attending university The irony is that
degrees in law, medicine or accountancy are directly vocational, and
on the other hand, both FE colleges and Adult Education Colleges
have in the past been able to provide a wide range of opportunities
for personal development for members of their local communities. A6.
Even within universities there is a class divide. Fees and debt not
only deter poorer applicants, they often disadvantage poorer
students during their courses compared with those whose parents are
able to subsidise them. Most
degree courses are designed for full-time study, but the majority of
students now undertake sizeable amounts of paid work during term
time. This can lead to stress, missed deadlines and lower grades
than obtained by students of the same ability free to devote all
their time to studying. A7.
Over a third of students studying undergraduate courses and over two
thirds of those following post-graduate courses now study part-time,
but this fact is rarely mentioned in discussions of higher
education, its structure or its funding. A8.
Just as in schools, there is too much testing in many universities -
too much graded course work, too many deadlines and exams.
Especially for students doing paid work and/or with family
responsibilities, life is a juggling act. Hours of contact with
lecturers have been reduced and opportunities for informal, in depth
discussion and guidance are extremely limited. . It hardly needs
saying that students doing a lot of paid work have no time for
exploring around the set syllabus or opportunity for mature
reflection, which used to be seen as a key benefit of studying for a
degree. All the emphasis now is on getting a qualification, a “good”
degree. A9.
Many students still enjoy and feel they benefit from their courses
but there is evidence of swelling dissatisfaction among some
students about what they are receiving for their fees of £3000 a
year. At the same time, university staff are stressed by trying to
look after too many students and course work marking is for some an
intolerable pressure, especially with students being so over-anxious
about grades. A10.
The key fact behind what is happening in post 16 education is that
it is under-funded. There is gross disparity about what is spent on
courses and institutions funded
by the LSC (£3b) and
the universities (£10b). Yet the
universities are under-funded by international standards..
There have always been complicated cross subsidies between
teaching and research and between different subjects within each
university but such flexibility has been eroded in recent years by
new funding arrangements forcing the universities to concentrate on
demonstrating a high research output. Research-intensive
universities have benefited from this but even they claim that the
funding they receive for teaching undergraduates is inadequate,
especially in the physical sciences (hence a number of closures or
threatened closures of science courses). The majority of other
universities have responded to the new funding arrangements by
increasing numbers – cramming the students in – but
without increasing staff or support facilities. This has to
have diminished the quality of the student experience. A11. FHE Colleges have been very seriously under-funded for years for the range of work they do in comparison with both schools and universities. They have suffered constant changes in the streams of money available to them and the systems of measuring their effectiveness. Present proposals with their emphasis on competing for funds for training and skills courses, will limit their flexibility. General adult education, including EFL courses, is already feeling the pinch B. SEA’s vision for post 16 provisionB1.
Access to education should be available to all who want to learn at
any stage in their lives. Opportunity should be provided for
personal development as well as employment skills. Britain needs a
society educated in human values, enabling it to play its part in
responding to the needs
of the world community, as
well as a highly skilled workforce able to hold its own in the
rapidly changing, globalised world economy.
So provision
must take account of the need to provide opportunities for
continuing education, both general and vocational, and not just for
young people between 18 and 30. Community and informal education
must be properly funded
so they can play their full part in raising general educational
standards. B2.
Continued improvement in pre-school provision and a genuinely
comprehensive school system providing for the individual needs of
all children are a pre-requisite for the development of such a
society. The dichotomy between academic and vocational education and
the associated idea that there are different types of children who
should be streamed into different types of education needs to be
abolished. An all-round, balanced
curriculum should be available to all children until 16. B3.
Because the current school system fails many children, especially
from lower class backgrounds, current post 16 education needs to
give priority to raising the educational level of these young
people.so that they can work and be included in society. Whatever
money is needed for this, and for greater
levels of social support through youth clubs and informal
education. to supplement traditional educational provision, must be
found. B4.
But the need to give priority to such remedial action must not
hinder the development of wide-ranging and inclusive provision for
all young people nor the development of continuing education in
further and higher educational institutions. While employer’s
views have a place to play in planning post 16 and adult education,
the views of students about their educational needs should take
priority over the narrow training needs of employers. B5.
All stages of education post 16 should be permeable and selection
should be reduced wherever practicable. Artificial barriers
preventing students entering courses they are capable of taking
should come down. B6.
The establishment of Tertiary Colleges instead of the present
divided institutional structure would make it easier for students to
progress easily, but where they do not exist, planned provision and
cooperation between all providers in a region should be directed at
the needs of students in the area and not at the financial
competitiveness of individual institutions. Some form of democratic
accountability needs to be set up at a wider level than Local
Authorities. B7.
The value of all types of courses should be recognized and the
fallacy that only doing a degree is worthwhile should be resisted. C. Current issues and SEA policy1. Both FHE Colleges and Universities need a higher level of state funding, paid for out of general taxation. 2. SEA was opposed to the introduction of fees for undergraduate studies and continues to deplore driving students into debt in order to fund higher education. If the Government is not prepared to abolish fees, SEA calls upon it to retain the £3000 cap. 3. Part-time students over the age of 18 pay fees in both Universities and FHE Colleges at levels determined by each institution. Some students are subsidized by their employers and fees can be remitted by FHE Colleges for some lower level courses and for some students on the grounds of hardship. · SEA calls upon the Government to provide sufficient funds to FHE Colleges for teaching part-time students so that fees can be kept low enough not to discourage access to courses of all kinds and at all levels for which there is demand, and so Colleges can afford to continue to remit fees for poor students. · HEFCE funding allocations should treat full-time and part-time students equally. This means that funds should be given for the number of modules or units being studied at post “A” level, not for the numbers of full-time and part-time students. 4. The method of allocating money to both universities and other providers of HE courses (defined as post A level or other equivalent qualifications) should be changed so that the costs of teaching students are separated from research and the maintenance of historic buildings. Teaching costs should be properly covered allowing for the employment of adequate numbers of staff with time available for teaching students 5. In any system where some students are paying fees and others are exempt, the exempted fees should be paid to the institution by the funding councils, not be taken out of individual institutions’ revenues (as bursaries are currently). 6. The Government’s recent Green Paper proposes making continuing in education until 18, full or part-time, compulsory with sanctions against non-attenders. The NEC on 12 May last year were unanimous in opposing compulsion, although welcoming the introduction of extra financial incentives and the requirement for employers to give time off for education. SEA’s Conference endorsed this position. The problems of lack of motivation, which start early on in schools, cannot be tackled by criminalising young people for dropping out. SEA is proposing an wide-ranging investigation into the reasons for alienation from education by young people and the development of proposals for a school and post 16 curriculum which would keep them wanting to continue. 7. The most positive step taken by the Government to increase participation in education beyond the school leaving age has been the introduction of Educational Maintenance Awards (EMAs). SEA calls upon the Government to end the means testing of these awards and to make them universal for all in education, full or part-time after the school leaving age.. This could be paid for by ending Children’s allowances currently paid to parents with children in education 16-18. As a further incentive to young people, SEA calls for the Government to increase these allowances. 8. Adults pursuing level 2 or 3 qualifications should also get EMAs at an appropriate level. 9. Evidence shows that the current system of bursaries for University students is being used as a marketing tool and is failing to meet the needs of the poorest students. It should be replaced, as the NUS demands, by a nationally funded system of grants based on need. 10. SEA supports the proposal to give some FHE Colleges the right to validate their own Foundation degrees.
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