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Key skills and basic skills

In 2005 the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority began work on outlining functional skills as part of the process to merge basic skills and key skills.

Key skills and basic skills - what are they?

Key skills are part of the raising standards agenda for 16-19 year olds but are also linked to the basic skills qualifications framework used by adult literacy teachers and trainers. The key skills programme was introduced in September 2000.

Key skills qualifications (levels 1-4) are available in communication, application of number and information technology. The assessment involves an internal (portfolio) and external (test) component. Key skills achievements count towards the targets for the Skills for Life strategy. Also available are the wider key skills units: working with others, improving own learning and performance, and problem solving, which are assessed by portfolio alone.

The 14-19 Green Paper Extending opportunities, raising standards (February 2002) recommends that 16-19 year olds should be entitled to study maths, English - or the equivalent key skills - and ICT until they have reached level 2. More on the 14-19 Green Paper

For more information visit www.dfes.gov.uk/keyskills or the key skills website support programme at www.keyskillssupport.net

The QCA key skills team can be contacted on 020 7509 5613 or email keyskills@qca.org.uk

Read more on basic skills


A brief guide to comparing qualifications

  Entry 1 Entry 2 Entry 3 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5
Basic Skills Tests        
Key Skills          
NVQ        
GCSE D-G (4 of)                
GCSE C-A (4 of)                
'A' Level                


Key Skills in Context website

The Key Skills in Context website aims to place the development of key skills at level three into contexts which are meaningful and realistic. The site is a thematically based, multi-media resource, providing students with an opportunity, through a series of tasks and activities, to collect evidence for their key skills portfolio. It encourages them to:

  • consider future career options
  • gain an insight into particular industry sectors, and the sorts of issues they face
  • expand on interests outside current areas of study
  • integrate key skills development within current areas of study
  • develop and evidence key skills within a realistic context.
The resource is divided into four themes: Europe and the World of Work; Nutrition and a Healthy Lifestyle; Planning for the Future; and News Media. Each of these themes provides a context for developing key skills. The themes have been selected to reflect interesting issues which impact on modern society, the world of work, and existing curriculum areas.

See Key Skills in Context at www.keyskillsincontext.co.uk


Plan to 'merge' basic skills and key skills

The Department for Education and Skills and its partners are exploring the potential for basic skills and key skill to be merged in the future. The move is understood to be in response to requests from the field. A new two-year project to plan their convergence is one of seven new Skills for Life contracts put out to tender by the Adult Basic Skills Strategy Unit in April 2004.

Basic skills consists of adult literacy, numeracy and language (English for speakers of other languages), with ICT now identified as a further basic skill. Key skills consists of communication, application of number, information and communication technology, working with others, improving own learning and performance, and problem solving.

The two programmes are based on common standards specifications and share the same multiple choice national test at levels 1 and 2 (but key skills has additional elements of assessment based on portfolio work and spoken and written communication).

The DfES has long stressed that basic skills is far more than just a remedial programme concerned with adult literacy and numeracy - and emphasise that it is the foundation for a continuum of learning which supports the aim of level 2 qualifications for all adults and can enable learners to progress to level 3 and beyond.

The project, led by Terry Smith of ABSSU, is described as "designed to prepare the way for full convergence between existing essential skills of basic and key skills."

(Basic Skills Bulletin, May 2004)


Inspector's annual report attacks quality of work training

Nearly 60% of work-based training for young people is inadequate according to inspectors in August 2002. Only 31% of foundation modern apprentices (MAs), and 35% of advanced MAs, complete the whole framework.

David Sherlock, chief inspector of the Adult Learning Inspectorate, said he had to be "severe" in presenting his first annual report. "It is impossible to gloss over these figures. There are big problems causing serious concern."

A significant cause of poor achievement of MAs was the failure by learners to gain key skills qualifications. Some employers left them to the end of programmes or ditched them altogether.

He said the key skills were a barrier rather than a pathway to success for young people. Their delivery should be reconsidered and put "up front" in programmes provided at skills centres, outside the apprenticeship framework. They should be funded and taught separately, he said.

Mr Sherlock's report identified 24 providers which were world class. He also said that grades for training in the New Deal had improved steadily since inspections began in 1999, with provision satisfactory or better in 90% of the gateway programmes.

(TES, 2 August 2002)



 

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