Banner
News every FE Week - FENews.co.uk
All time feed Jobs All time feed News FEVideo feed Video


  • Home
  • FE News Exclusives
  • FE Feature Writers
    • John Hayes - Skills Minister
    • David Grailey - NCFE
    • Geoff Russell - SFA
    • John Wilford - FE PR Group Rave
    • Margaret Adams - Independent
    • Paul Phillips - Weston College
    • Lynne Sedgmore - 157 Group
    • Rob Wye - LSIS
    • Seb Schmoller - ALT
    • Simon Waugh - NAS
    • Tom Wilson - Unionlearn
    • Toni Fazaeli - IfL
    • Trevor Luker - Pearson
  • FE Job Search
  • FE Community
    • FE Events
    • Submissions
    • Press Releases
  • FE Video
  • Advertise on FE News
    • How We Can Help You
    • Advertise Here
    • Advertise Jobs
    • Vacancy Rate Card
  • News Archive
  • FE Experts
  • Contact
    • Direct Contact
    • FENews Twitter
    • FECareers Twitter
    • Daily News Via Email
    • Newsletter - FE Soundbite


Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com


Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com

The election battle lines are increasingly being drawn as 2010 gets underway

Tuesday, 05 January 2010 05:42
tomwilson
At the end of 2009, the Government set out its stall in the Skills for Growth White Paper. It proposed a new target: for three-quarters of people to have participated in higher education or completed an advanced apprenticeship or equivalent vocational qualification by the age of 30. There will be funding for 35,000 more advanced/higher level apprenticeships over the next two years and scholarships to university for apprentices.


The White Paper aimed for a more strategic approach on skills especially in priority sectors such as advanced manufacturing and working towards a low carbon economy. It announced a new Joint Investment Scheme for the sector, with employers expected to provide half of a £100m fund to support 75,000 additional training places.

The Conservative Party has said it will also be expanding apprentice numbers, by diverting Train to gain cash. It will establish 12 new technical colleges in the major conurbations for young people from the age of 14, with a focus on vocational qualifications. It will create a "slim" Further Education Funding Council for England and Sector Skills Councils to administer funding and accredit courses. Many skills organisations will be thrown on to the Tories’ bonfire of the quango.

The good news for unionlearn is that David Willetts, the shadow minister for universities and skills, has said that he strongly supports the work that we are doing in the workplace to improve skills and learning and the partnerships we are forging with employers to put training high on the agenda.

But as the opinion polls fluctuate and the political pundits speculate, it is the economy that will dominate. Alistair Darling’s pre-budget report did little to comfort either the business community or trade unions. While his tax on bankers’ bonuses made a valid point, it soon became clear that those in the line of fire will be civil servants and public sector workers who face job losses, wage freezes and pension squeezes.

There was some unexpected good news, including an extra £200m funding this year for 16 to 19 year olds; but adult skills face cuts of £340m by 2013. Following the announcement of £600m cuts in higher education, science and research budgets the University and College Union predicted that more than 6,000 jobs could be at risk in further and higher education and hundreds of courses could be cut. And, the news of the closure of Corus’s plant in Redcar, putting 1,700 steelworkers out of a job, signals tough times ahead in industry.

This is why unionlearn has launched a Recession and Recovery programme. This project, working throughout the regions, is training learning and trade union reps in examples of best practise in avoiding redundancy. Where redundancies occur or are about to happen, the project works with employees to improve their learning and skills, help them find new employment and prepare them for new jobs as the economy begins to recover from recession.

unionlearn is working with the Regional Development Agencies, the Alliance of Sector Skills Councils (ASSC), Jobcentre Plus, the Learning and Skills Council (and its reincarnations) and other key players concerned with employment and skills, including Acas and Business Link.

So whether it is March or May when the electorate makes its decision, there is plenty to play for in the months to come.

Tom Wilson is director of unionlearn, the TUC’s learning and skills organisation


Read FE News articles by Tom Wilson:

Skills for Growth White Paper will help UK catch up to Europe

The commission of inquiry into the future for lifelong learning

A celebration of learning


Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com


Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com
Email a Friend Print 
Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com
Follow us on Twitter
Problems viewing our videos?
Get Adobe Flash Player

You maybe interested in...

  • AeLP's Graham Hoyle shares a few thoughts on Apprenticeships - 07.02.12
  • Chris Cherry gives an LSIS update and discusses the group's role in the sector - 06.02.12
  • Chris Cherry, gives an LSIS update and discusses its role in the sector - 06.02.12
  • Equalities – a trade union priority - 06.02.12
  • Korean students complete vocational education course - 13.01.12
  • The real value of skills and training - 11.01.12
  • Christmas day learndirect learners surge 144% in five-years - 27.12.11
  • Green deal or no deal - 26.12.11
  • John Hayes announces new measures to improve Apprenticeships - 20.12.11
  • Building a world class FE and Skills system - 16.12.11
  • Cracking the Code - 15.12.11
  • Why providers should give employers some control over training funding - 14.12.11
  • FE sector deserves the proper use and monitoring of funding - 14.12.11
  • Gordon Marsden MP calls for new green skills plan - 10.12.11
  • Government awards £18.7m for 19,000 Higher Apprenticeships - 02.12.11
Conferences

Daily news straight to your email
FE Community Registration
Submit a press release
Submit an event
FE Soundbite Newsletter

Top 5 Stories

  1. SFA's Geoff Russell discusses the shift of colleges moving to training provider turf

  2. John Hayes, Skills Minister shares his FE vision

  3. Game, Set, Match

  4. If seeing is believing

  5. New term, new notebooks, new pencils ...and some old challenges

FE Careers

  • Trainer Assessor - Health & Social Care
  • Trainer Assessor - Health & Social Care
  • Operations Director- South
  • Primary Teacher - Year 4
  • Business Development Executive

FE Events

  • AoC Literacy & Numeracy Conference
  • Carshalton College Open Event During Apprenticeship Week
  • Masterchef Cook Off at Tresham during Apprenticeship Week
  • Equalities in Practice workshops
  • E Readers for learning - implications for policy and practice
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner

FE News is the Further Education, Skills and Work Based Learning online news magazine.

We provide you with four sources of news across the Further Education, Skills and Employability sectors.

Exclusive articles from Further Education sector specialists, our team of reporters give you the latest breaking news and updates on emerging education strategies. With our Press Release section you can view the latest Press Releases across FE, and see breaking news – even before it reaches a reporters desk! FE News also ‘shoot’ video interviews and news bulletins so you receive the latest developments in Skills News and across the Further Education and Employability sectors.

Search Jobs at FECareers
157 Group
All FE Jobs NVQ Assessor Jobs Tutor/Lecturer Jobs Verifier Jobs Managerial Jobs Sales Jobs
Every week in FE News | Welfare to Work jobs and Work Programme jobs
Privacy Policy  |  Sitemap | Web Design Company - Traverse Designs
© 2011 FE News - Further Education College & Training Provider Magazine