Everyone working in or with schools agrees on two things: too few 16-year-olds stay on in education and those who do leave at 16 are poorly equipped for the world of work.
Less than half of 16-year-olds gain a C or above in maths, and only 56% achieve this in English. A recent CBI survey found that 42% of employers were not satisfied with school-leavers’ basic literacy and numeracy, and 57% were not satisfied with their communication and problem-solving skills.
One school of thought is that the problem is largely a result of Britain’s schools fast-tracking the more able and motivated to academic courses like A-levels and leaving the rest to flounder in poorly resourced and undervalued vocational courses.
‘NVQs were for the not so clever ones’
Vicky Farley, 16, has just left her local secondary school in Eccles to work full-time at the Trafford Centre’s Landscape Team in Greater Manchester.
From the age of 14, she has worked at the centre for one day a week while studying for her Level 1 NVQ in horticulture.
Although she took GSCEs in Maths, English and Science, Vicky insists she is glad to have done the NVQ rather than been obliged to study GCSE French or German.
“NVQs were for those of us who were not as clever as the others, but studying for the qualification gave us the push we needed,” she explains.
“One day a week at the centre was about right. It never affected my studies at school – in fact I worked harder at my GSCEs because I knew exactly what I wanted to do when I left.”
Vicky was given a special recognition award for outstanding excellence by the Trafford Centre in 2004 and the Student of The Year award by her school in 2003.
She now plans to study for her Level 2 NVQ and pursue a career in horticulture.
Vocational education proposals
Revised GCSEs in English and Maths so no student can get a grade C or above without passing a functional skills unit.
A broad programme of study, including national curriculum subjects which will take up about half of students’ time.
Rationalisation of the 3,500 vocational qualifications into more easily recognisable diplomas, containing specialised materials, GCSEs and A-levels. English and maths will be included in every diploma.
Introduction of 14 “lines of learning” covering most occupational sectors, with the first four coming on line in 2008. Learning will be offered in both the workplace and the classroom.
Recognition of movement between academic and vocational routes.
Piloting in 2006 of a strong work-focused programme aimed at seriously disaffected 14- to 16-year-olds.
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