See also Adult basic skills
update (covers news on adult literacy and basic skills)
The TES reported on a pledge by the Government to spend more on community and neighbourhood adult education, after three years of spending cuts. John Denham, secretary of state for the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS) is reallocating funds for ESOL classes, schemes to help people back to work and those for adults with disabilities and learning difficulties. The DIUS’s budget is set to rise by 2.2% following the comprehensive spending review, with funding committed to Train to Gain.
(TES, 19 October 2007)
The BBC reported on a three-year study by the University of Manchester which found that British people spent more time reading in 2007 than in the 1970s. In the US reading has declined in a similar period. The number of Britons reading newspapers and magazines has declined but those who do read them devote more time to them.
The School of Social Sciences compared the records of thousands of people between 1975 and 2000. They looked at data from France, Holland, Norway, the UK and the USA amid rising concerns about the state of British literacy. They examined 10-15,000 records from each country and found that:
- In 2000, Brits read on average for five more minutes each day than they did in 1975.
- In 1998 Americans read on average for nine minutes less each day than they did in 1975.
- The increase in the UK was greater for women than it was for men.
- Of those Brits that read, a greater number read for one hour or more than did in 1975.
Dr Dale Southerton from the research team, said that our increasingly busy diaries meant that Britons had many ‘gaps’ in their day- waiting for trains, a partner or friends. Reading is ideal to fill these gaps up.
(BBC, 10 July 2007)
Cuts to adult education have proved to be more than three
times as severe as officials predicted, with nearly 700,000
places disappearing in 2006. In fact, the number of places
in adult and community learning, further education and work-based
learning fell by 674,700. Colleges said core vocational subjects
had been hit, along with leisure courses. Alistair Thomson,
the senior policy officer of the National Institute of Adult
Continuing Education, blamed the unexpectedly high fall in
numbers on failure to properly market test the effect of funding
changes. He said: "We are extremely disappointed that a Government
that spent so long widening participation is presiding over
such a precipitous decline," he said.
(TES, 12 January 2007)
The organisation behind the Government's flagship online
learning courses says it will bounce back following a critical
report from MPs. The Commons public accounts committee says
learndirect still needs to be more efficient, despite having
made some progress in cutting costs. It spends a third of
its budget on marketing and administration.
However, UFI, formerly known as the University
for Industry, which runs learndirect, says it will slash
£10 million a year from costs by measures, including
scrapping its 26 'hubs', which distribute funding to training
organisations including colleges.
Clients take courses using computers with software and online
support provided by learndirect, backed up in many cases by
classroom work. The report said the benefits of learndirect
were being lost on the majority of firms. It said just 4%
of small and medium-sized businesses used the service. Only
37% of firms were aware that learndirect is intended to support
them with staff training. The report says: "UFI's rationale
is to boost employability and productivity, but it has done
limited work directly with employers."
(TES, 10 March 2006)
Eight in Ten: Adult learners in further education, a report written by people with experience of colleges and sponsored by the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE).
The report proposes that colleges should concentrate on:
- Access to employability
- Workforce development
- Creating and sustaining cultural value
NIACE surveyed 100 senior college managers and found that they saw the business of further education as being primarily the support of individuals. One in four saw the key issue as the health of their communities and just one-tenth the prosperity of the economy.
The report calls for further education to strike new roots into its vocational history, not to look backwards towards a long-gone national economy based on local manufacturing, but to secure its place in the skills strategy. The "eight in ten" are the predominant adult population of the colleges, most of whom learn with at least a sidelong glance at their work.
This report suggests that funding for adults should be a matter of right and should not depend on other priorities. It suggests that meeting the ever-shifting needs of adults properly demands that a minimum of 20% of a college's funding should be spent at its own discretion and accounted for to the Learning and Skills Council.
(TES, 13 January 2006)
Fees for millions of adults to study at further education
colleges will double as government subsidies are withdrawn.
Ruth Kelly, the Education Secretary, told college principals
that they faced "really tough choices" in trying
to improve employment skills in Britain to the level of other
industrialised countries.
Public funding for adult education and training would be concentrated
on those "who most need help" to improve their job
prospects. Colleges would have to raise charges for everybody
else by 40% within two years and by almost 100% soon after.
Most of the 3.5 million adult students in FE colleges pay
about 27% of the cost of their courses. Ms Kelly said that
the Government wanted this proportion to rise to 37.5% by
2007-08 and to "up to 50% longer term" as part of
"rebalancing" of contributions by the State and
individuals and employers.
(The Times, 17 November 2005)
Colleges and training providers need to double the number
of adults achieving GCSE-level qualifications every year in
order to meet government targets for the workforce. A study
for the Learning and Skills Development Agency has revealed
that the targets will require an extra 100,000 adults to meet
the level 2 standard each year.
The Government pledged to increase the number of adults
in the workforce with five good GCSEs, or equivalent qualifications,
by 3.6 million between 2001 and 2010. At present, an estimated
7 million adults in England and Wales lack them.
Pam Vaughan, the Learning and Skill Council's director of
skills for employment, said it was more than doubling the
size of the national employer training programme, which allows
people to study at their place of work. With 50% of unemployed
people lacking level 2 qualifications, the LSC also wants
to collaborate with Jobcentre Plus.
The report points out that the largest group of people without
level 2 qualifications are skilled workers, who are also more
likely to respond to efforts to bring them back into education.
Mr Fletcher said that, while these people may not have reached
level 2 at school, they are not "languishing in unemployment".
Mr Fletcher said: "If they are doing a skilled job
without level 2, they're not likely to have a strong need
for further qualifications. There is a dilemma. The easiest
way to meet the target may be to go for this group, but it
may not be the best thing for the individuals or for the economy."
(TES, 7 October 2005)
NIACE are leading the Learning for Living Consortium working
with learners who experience a range of difficulties and barriers
in learning literacy, language and numeracy. The aim of the
project is to research and develop guidance for teachers,
practitioners, carers, support workers and employers. Each
set of guidance focuses on a particular development area including:
Access to Employment; Pre-Entry and Entry Levels; Bilingual
Learners; ESOL and Learning Difficulties; Teacher Training
Modules; Family Learning; and training in the use of the Pre-Entry
Curriculum Framework for those working in health and social
care settings.
For more information visit www.dfes.gov.uk/readwriteplus/learningforliving/
(NIACE press release, October 2005)
The Fairer Funding campaign is being launched by NIACE in
England to stimulate public debate on fairer funding arrangements
for adult learning. The campaign briefing sets out practical
steps that those committed to adult learning, individuals
as well as organisations, can take to protect and promote
it in ways that allow local, as well as national, needs to
be considered when allocating funds for adult learning. Emphasis
has been placed on highlighting the benefits of adult learning
to local communities and the consequent impact of funding
decisions on course closures and increases in course fees.
For further information a campaign briefing pack is available
to download free of charge at www.niace.org.uk/fairerfunding.
(www.niace.org.uk,
July 2005)
Thousands of evening classes and part-time courses are being
scrapped because of a cut in government funding, further education
colleges have said. More than 200,000 adult education and
training places on courses ranging from A-level English to
painting and decorating will disappear in September, with
more closures expected in 2006, principals warned. The Association
of Colleges said fees for many of the remaining courses will
soar as colleges try to make up budget shortfalls.
The association's chief executive, John Brennan, said the
closures follow a 3% cut in funding for adult learning announced
by the Learning and Skills Council last week. Mr Brennan said:
"We had expected a 5% rise in adult provision and we
actually got a 3% cut." About 15,000 courses have been
affected.
Bill Rammell, the Minister for Lifelong Learning, said: "Over
the past three years, we have increased the cash going into
the sector by £1bn [25% in cash terms]
nearly
three-quarters of colleges will be getting at least 2.5% more
than last year." But principals say the cuts have hit
some of the most vulnerable people, including those with learning
difficulties and pensioners. Hampstead Garden Suburb Institute,
in north London, is axing 50% of its provision for people
with severe learning difficulties.
A spokesman for the DfES said the government had targeted
its funding at those with the greatest need.
(Guardian, 14 June 2005)
A study has revealed that thousands of adults
miss out on university places because those who control admissions
do not recognise the value of their qualifications. Repeated
efforts by Governments to raise the status of vocational education
have failed to make a significant dent in the elitist higher
education (HE) system, the study suggested. Lack of knowledge
about alternative routes into HE was prevalent among teachers,
university admissions tutors, professional bodies, employers
and the Connexions advice service for 13 to 19-year-olds,
the study found.
Maggie Greenwood of the Learning and Skills
Development Agency, which commissioned the study, said, "We
are still stuck in the groove of thinking that the practical,
vocational courses are inferior to more academic studies."
The BMW apprenticeship scheme, run jointly with the university
and city college in Coventry, was cited as a successful example
of moving people into HE. But such schemes are the exception
rather than the rule, the report suggests. Of 600,000 adults
who started level 3 studies last year, only 42,000 (7%) were
doing A-Levels. More than 500,000 were on work-related courses
and apprenticeships, but only 1% of apprentices made it to
higher education, the report shows.
(TES, 11 March 2005)
The learning centre in Gloucester is the latest in a series
of learning centres opened by the BBC in partnership with
the further education sector. The centre is in a deprived
multicultural part of the city where potential learners are
among the most difficult to reach. Yet executives are confident
that the BBC brand will lure them in.
Andy Griffee, controller of BBC English regions said: "People
will come in because they feel they have ownership of it,
They feel they almost have a right to it because they pay
the licence fee. And let's face it, broadcasting is a sexy
and glamorous industry and that in turn appeals to youngsters."
The new centre is run in partnership with Gloucestershire
College of Arts and Technology (Gloscat) with £1.6 million
from Gloucestershire Learning and Skills Council (LSC) and
£800,000 from the European Social Fund. The BBC has
opened similar centres in Blackburn, Sheffield, Liverpool
and Stoke-on-Trent, with others soon to open in Coventry and
Leicester.
The BBC also runs a fleet of mobile learning centres in remote
rural areas. The latest venture is part of a deliberate policy
to bring the local radio station closer to its community of
listeners, said Mark Hurrell, managing editor of BBC Radio
Gloucestershire. He set up the new centre with Gloscat and
the local LSC after overseeing a similar operation in Stoke.
Mr Hurrell said: "This is the original Reithian vision
of educate, entertain and inform."
In its first week the Gloucester centre had 150 people through
the door, of whom just under half signed up for courses. They
can access free lessons in IT as well as a range of other
general interest subjects. The centre also has a studio aimed
at giving the public more involvement in radio programmes.
Greg Smith, principal of Gloscat, said that learners will
also be referred on to other courses at his and other colleges.
(TES, 28 January 2005)
The Chief Inspector's annual report on the state of adult
education is as much a verdict on the performance of the Government
as on colleges and training organisations under their gaze.
David Sherlock's report echoes the concerns of those, including
the Association of Colleges, who have complained of the difficulties
caused by the ever-changing demands of ministers. He says:
"To achieve a sense of excellence and well-being, further
education colleges need greater stability and clarity in the
expectations placed upon them, and to learn to say no."
Mr Sherlock, head of the Adult Learning Inspectorate, also
warns that the focus on basic skills and level 2 qualifications
- equivalent to GCSE grades A-C - should not be allowed to
distract attention from level 3 (equivalent to A-level). The
report accepts the urgency of helping the seven million adults
said to lack functional literacy and numeracy, and expresses
concern at the lack of qualified lecturers in adult basic
skills. "We need to take care not to exaggerate the problems
we face with literacy and numeracy, however, lest investment
in learning be skewed too far towards the lowest and the highest
levels. There is a danger of neglecting level 3 in the middle,
where Britain compares least well with our industrial competitors."
The Inspectorate wants a more sophisticated understanding
of the benefits of adult and community education, largely
provided by local education authorities.
(TES, 26 November 2004)
Those who already have qualifications will pay more under changes
proposed by the Learning and Skills Council (LSC). The LSC yesterday
launched a 12-week consultation on how resources should be spent
on the Government's skills strategy. The aim is to shift priorities
towards adults with no or low qualifications and away from those
who have already benefited from education or training. The proposals
include fee increases for the better-qualified. The council
also says employers must be ready to accept a greater share
of the burden.
(TES, 16 July 2004)
Fewer people are now going to evening classes than when Labour
came to power, despite the Government's commitment to education
and lifelong learning, according to a report published by
the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE)
in May 2004. Fewer than a fifth of adults say they are doing
some sort of learning, the lowest figure since before Labour
took office in 1997.
Just 14% of 65 to 74-year-olds say they have participated
in education in the past three years, compared with 19% in
1996. This decline seems to reflect the Government's priorities
to concentrate on particular groups, says Alan Tuckett, NIACE's
director. He urges the Government not to ease off from its
policy initiatives linking work, welfare and learning. Mr
Tuckett said: "The relentless focus of funders on achievement
targets is narrowing the curriculum offer to adults, as expansion
of provision for young people is brought at the expense of
their elders."
The picture is not entirely gloomy, though. Separate data
from the Learning and Skills Council suggests that since 2001
there has been a sharp increase in participation among learners
aged 60 and above.
Social class appears to be a significant factor in the trend.
The survey indicates that the decline in participation has
been marked among people from the poorest backgrounds, in
socio-economic groups D and E, from 26% to 23%.
One statistic "makes clear that the learning divide
is as powerful as ever", comments NIACE's report, Business
as Usual. More than twice the proportion (53%) of adults
with internet access are current or recent learners, compared
with those with no internet access (21%).
The survey, carried out by Research Surveys of Great Britain,
interviewed nearly 5,000 people aged 17 and over across the
UK during February 2004 using a broad definition of learning.
(Guardian, 18 May 2004)
Business as usual...? The NIACE survey on adult participation
in learning is available from www.niace.org.uk.
A study has shown that adult learning can help people become
better parents, regardless of whether their courses involve
parenting skills. Older students said doing courses made them
more confident in their parenting abilities, better able to
communicate and more understanding and patient with their
children.
Adult learning can also improve relations with partners and
parents, the study found. Researchers from the Centre for
Research on the Wider Benefits of Learning at the Institute
of Education, University of London, looked at 145 case studies
of people aged 16+ in three UK locations to find out how learning
affects well-being and social and family relationships.
The research also drew on the British birth cohort studies,
involving the analysis of the lives of 10,000 people. The
interviewees said they acquired skills that helped them in
a practical way, such as inventing good games, and became
more open to other people's approaches to parenting.
They found it easier to see things from a child's point of
view and to understand the child as a member of a peer group.
Taking parents of young children out of the home and their
daily routines also alleviated stress and depression, led
to more tolerance and understanding and made participants
more willing to compromise at home, the study found. One parent
spoke of her relief at getting out of the "Postman Pat
mentality", which lacks adult conversation and stimulation.
But adult learning may also place a strain on family relationships,
for example where family members are seen as obstructive or
negative.
The Benefits of Learning: the impact
of education on health, family life and social capital,
Institute of Education: ISBN 0415 328 012.
(TES, 12 March 2004)
Colleges are bracing themselves for slumps in the number
of adults enrolling for courses, because most of their students
over the age of 19 don't fit the Government's criteria for
full funding.
Up to 90% of a typical general further education college's
adult students could now find themselves paying between £500
and £1,000 a year for their courses. Only about 10%
of a typical college's adult learners are pursuing courses
that fall into the priority categories laid out in the Government's
White Paper on adult skills.
College principals say that warnings received from their
funders, the local Learning and Skills Councils have made
it clear that funding will be concentrated first on the Government's
priorities: the 16 to 19 age group, and work-based learning
and basic skills for adults, in that order.
A spokesman for the LSC said it was currently trying to introduce
a funding formula for the adult and community learning for
which t has taken responsibility. This would involve converging
different levels of funding that existed across the country
to a common stream that would involve winners and losers.
"We want to reassure colleges that nobody will lose more
than 10% of their budget and nobody is going to gain more
than 5%," he said. "And we won't introduce it until
we find a satisfactory solution."
(Guardian, 23 September 2003)
Most colleges and adult education services have created action
plans to help lift people in deprived areas out of poverty,
according to a study commissioned by the Government.
Eight out of 10 colleges have taken lessons to local people
by creating outreach and neighbourhood learning centres. Six
out of 10 employ people as community development workers to
reach people in deprived communities and involve 'local regeneration
workers' when designing courses. However, the study by the
Learning and Skills Development Agency shows only "patchy
evidence" of the more specific sort of training for local
people that the Government's Neighbourhood Renewal Unit identified
as essential.
More needs to be done to give people the interpersonal and
community leadership skills that well-heeled communities take
for granted.
Breathing life into communities is available at www.lsda.org.uk/pubs
(TES, 22 August 2003)
Ministers hope foundation degrees will be popular
and accessible enough to bring 7000,000 people into further
and higher education by 2002 - the target the Government has
set itself. It is hoped that the two-year foundation degree
modelled on the American associate degree will provide the
winning formula of academic knowledge and applied skills.
(TES, 18 February 2000)
The Open University is launching a new returners' route,
called the Openings Programme, starting well below the level
of the long-established foundation courses. Its bite-sized
taster courses start in the spring for those uncertain about
returning to study. The scheme offers three short courses
which students can take at their own pace, with two hours
of telephone support from a personal tutor. The courses involve
100 hours of learning over 14 weeks. The aim is to be as flexible
as possible and every learner will have a tutor with whom
they can negotiate submission dates for written work. The
tutor will advise initially on the suitability of the course
and, if necessary, suggest other routes. The idea is not to
set people up to fail.
(Independent, 13 January 2000)
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