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Posts archive for: October, 2007
  • Social or economic benefits

    I wrote this in an email to someone yesterday...

    ---

    There is currently something of a debate going on between those who would prefer to keep a focus on the individual and social/community benefits of higher education, and those who are driving this neo-Liberal agenda around Skills. In other words, is higher education supposed to be for the social or the economic good. Many people in the sector are uneasy about the current focus on skills, and the danger of reducing higher education to training.

    In YHELLN we need to tread a middle line through this. The message I would like to convey is that it is possible to embrace the skills agenda (I was serious about the fact that if we don't do this we risk becoming a poor nation) while still maintaining a social agenda. The research reflects this, and so does a lot of the work we are doing within YHELLN. We CAN look at the impacts on individuals and communities that go beyond skills and jobs, but at the same time work with employers to meet their skills needs. And we CAN deliver Foundation Degrees and other forms of vocational higher education that promote critical thinking and wider learning.

  • Comprehensive Spending Review

    Comprehensive Spending Review
    Implications for Higher Education

    Changes to the HE sector

    The CSR implies significant reform of the HE sector, though the word ‘reform’ is not used. Announced changes include:

    • Foundation Degree awarding powers for FE Colleges
    • It will be easier for private providers to gain degree awarding powers
    • Employers can accredit their in-house training and even become awarding bodies (it is not clear whether this will extend to higher education)
    • Expansion of HE focused on employer co-financed provision - 5,000 additional employer co-financed places and growth of at least 5,000 places per year to 2010/11. Priority will be for work based learning and provision designed or delivered by employers and Sector Skills Councils
    • ‘Bite-sized learning, credit accumulation, flexible and innovative modes of delivery and curriculum design influenced by employers will be key features of the future HE system’
    • Building on the Higher Skills Pathfinders to ‘build the higher skills offer’ to employment. The DIUS also commit to ‘increasing interaction between HEIs and employers, including employers clearly articulating their skills needs’

    Indicators

    Most relevant to higher education is PSA Delivery Agreement 2

    Two indicators are of direct relevance:

    • 34% of working age adults qualified to level 4 and above by 2011, 36% by 2014.
    • Increase in overall HE participation among 18-30 year olds by one percentage point every two years until 2010/11

    For the first time there is a PSA indicator for the number of adults of working age who are qualified at Level 4 and above. This target will be disaggregated regionally. Local authorities have responsibility for contributing to this target.

    There is clearly some overlap between these indicators. However the second merely implies that the sector is set to expand based on existing models of participation, whereas the first implies a more fundamental changes in the way HE is delivered.

    Other news of interest

    • Sector Skills Councils will be relicenced to drive up quality in ensuring they are able to articulate employers’ skills needs
    • The National Skills Academy Network is underlined as of importance.
    • The number of Knowledge Transfer Partnerships will double, and FE Colleges will be encouraged to participate
    • Train to Gain will expand to Level 3. There may also be a role for the service at Level 4, this is likely to be related to the roll-out of the HEFCE Higher Skills Pathfinders.
    • The number of apprentices is set to expand significantly
    • Expansion in Level 3 provision will largely be through Train to Gain
    • A single, integrated business support brokerage service will be launched in April 09 via Business Link, and this will include skills brokerage
    • This Autumn, the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) will publish research communicating the benefits to business of investing in skills at all levels.

    Jenny Shaw, 10.10.07

  • Sainsbury Review

    The Sainsbury Review of UK Science and Innovation was published on Friday. Among the recommendations are included:

    - doubling of the number of Knowledge Transfer Partnerships and extending these further to FE Colleges
    - 'More support to business facing universities' through the Higher Education Innovation Fund (HEIF) though probably on a formula basis

    There are clear links with the Leitch Review and the promise of funding suggests that this would be something worth pursuing. In my opinion the overlap between 'third stream funding' for Universities and sale of accredited HE provision is currently under-developed.

  • Employer Engagement

    The Employer Engagement 'round table' meeting held at Reeds Hotel, Barton on Friday appeared to meet a need in relation to HE/FE staff who are currently engaging with, or wishing to engage with, employers. There was a call for further meetings that may perform a CPD role for participants.

  • Chamber of Commerce

    4.10
    Meeting at the Hull and Humber Chamber of Commerce resulted in discussion of demand-led HE and the concept of a 'fund' into which employers could tap in, to be used exclusively for accredited HE of their choice.

    This might work in the context of 'market failure' in some industry sectors, where higher skills would clearly benefit the economy as a whole but employers are currently unable or unwilling to invest.

    While this could not be a use for YHELLN funds, it is not impossible that a fund of this nature could be created through other funding sources.

  • Ufi

    3.10
    The Ufi portal/project 'Learning Through Work' is to be relaunched in January as a service to HE Providers who wish to provide flexible and/or blended learning solutions for learners in the workplace. Currently there are a few hundred learners in Yorkshire who are registered with HEIs outside the Region because so few Yorkshire HEIs are currently participating.

    I am arrainging opportunities for Ufi to showcase their system in the YHELLN area during November.

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