Transcript Slide 1

Progress in Higher Apprenticeships
November 2013
Michele Roberts
Head of Higher Apprenticeship
Development
Welcome
Apprenticeships
•Integral to the Skills Funding Agency, a partner organisation of BIS, with two customerfacing services:
•National Apprenticeship Service responsible for increasing Traineeships &
Apprenticeship opportunities
•National Careers Service provides impartial careers information, advice & guidance online,
by telephone or face-to-face, including enhanced follow-up for Apprenticeships
• Making skills work for England
The Work we Do
•Fund and promote adult FE and skills training in England including Traineeships and
Apprenticeships in a way that supports economic growth
•Deliver £4.1 billion of skills training through contracts with over 1,000 colleges, training
organisations and employers to support economic growth
•Enable FE to meet local need in most cost-effective way
Working with Employers
NAS works with more than 30,000 employers in England
A range of services for employers
–Working with larger employers we encourage Apprenticeship recruitment and programme
development
–Small Business Team offering services to smaller employers in offering Apprenticeship
opportunities
–Apprenticeship vacancies service working with Apprenticeship providers to advertise
vacancies, free of charge, for young people to apply (last year offering 100,000 vacancies)
–Promotion and communication of Apprenticeships through a range of activities, such as
Awards, Apprenticeship Grant for Employers, Campaigns or Policy changes
Working with learning Providers
and the sector
•Joint working with UVAC to promote Higher Apprenticeships to Universities and wider HE
sector
–
Best Practice in Work based learning delivery
–
Developing expertise in the HE sector in Apprenticeships
•Widening capacity of learning providers across all levels for Higher Apprenticeships
–
Expansion of delivery into Higher Apprenticeships
•Providing communication, expertise and ‘know-how’ on Apprenticeships for all
–
www.apprenticeships.gov.uk source of information, advice and guidance for all
•Apprenticeship brand strong among employers (84% satisfied with Apprenticeship
programme) and learners (88% satisfied with Apprenticeship programme)*
* NAS Review of Apprenticeship Research March 2013
What is an Apprenticeship?
• Focus of an Apprenticeship is about equipping individuals with new skills and learning
they need for their job roles
– Covering more than 170 industries and 1500 job roles from advertising to youth work
via environmental engineering and nuclear decommissioning
• Future employment and progression
• A way for young people and adults to earn while they learn in a real job, gaining a real
qualification and a real future
• Apprentices help businesses to grow their own talent by developing a motivated, skilled
and qualified workforce
Higher Apprenticeships
what are they?
• A Higher Apprenticeship is a recognised learning framework at:
•
Level 4 (Certificate of Higher Education)
•
Level 5 (Foundation Degree)
•
Level 6 (Bachelor’s Degree)
•
Level 7 (Master’s Degree)
• Higher Apprenticeships are designed to enable a learner in employment develop
the technical knowledge and occupational competence to perform a defined job
role at a specified level
• Higher Apprenticeships are employer led focused on developing the higher level
skills particular sectors need
Growing Higher Apprenticeships
• £25m investment by Government in 2011 - Higher Apprenticeship Fund
• Increase the number of Higher Apprenticeship frameworks available, covering more job
roles and industries
• Create work-based vocational education route for professions
• Engage a new cohort of learners in higher level skills
• Establish a respected, credible vocational learning offer
• Achieve parity of esteem with more academic education
Higher apprentices could earn around £150,000 more over their lifetime – comparable to
similar returns for the average graduate (London Economics, 2011)
Higher Apprenticeship Fund
• Delivered 30 ambitious, sector led partnerships
• Promises additional 20,000 Higher Apprenticeship starts
• 45 Higher Frameworks developed or in development
• New Frameworks approved on www.AFO.org.uk
• Some still developing
• New Frameworks are being promoted to increase take up by employers and individuals
–
NAS running a campaign in promoting Project Management, Human Resource, Information Technology, Health
Practitioner, Advanced Engineering
How Higher Apprenticeships
are growing….
Higher Apprenticeships
New Recruits
Make it your business
Higher Apprenticeships can offer great potential when considering recruitment
–wider pool of applicants, reaching more young people with talent and qualifications into jobs (1300 job
vacancies on Av site attracted 7413 applicants)
–Ability to offer vocational pathways in highly skilled areas of the business, growing your own and at the
same time gaining qualifications
–Talent and specialist skills developed earlier from within the business allowing greater progression
Existing Employees
Higher Apprenticeships can offer progression opportunities and help develop the skills and
professional qualifications within your business
–Ability to progress from Higher Certificate or Foundation Degree levels to Masters level
–Professional membership and standing within the sector you work
–Individuals to progress in career aspirations and continue their Apprenticeship route from Advanced level
Employers
Involved
ATT, Airbus, ASOS, Axa Insurance, AVIVA, BAE Systems, Balfour Beatty, Barceló Hotels, Barchester Homes, BDO, Bell
Valves, Bentley Motors, Boots, Bovis Lend Lease, Bristol Media, Britannia, British Airways, Britvic, BT, Burberry, CAA,
Carillion, Cambridge University Press, Centrica, Chubb Insurance, Coffee Snobs, Costain, Compass Group, David Wilson
Homes, Deloitte, Depuy International, DHL, E.ON, European Space Agency, Eversheds, Everything Everywhere, Financial
Skills Partnership, Flybe, Frank Hirth, Fujifilm, G4S, GM Vauxhall, Herbert Smith, Jet 2, Housing 21, HSBC, IBM, I-Build
Eco, Jaguar Land Rover, John Lewis, Keir, KPMG, Legal and General, Leyland Trucks, Marks and Spencer, McNulty
Offshore, Midas, Ministry of Defence, MITIE, Monarch, National Grid, Mott MacDonald, National Space Centre, Siemens,
Nationwide, Nestle, Next, NG Bailey, Oxford Instruments, Persimmon Homes, Pertemps, Price Bailey, PwC, Remploy,
Rentokil Initial, Saga Home Care, Santander, Scottish and Southern Energy, Sellafield, Servisair, Shepherd Offshore, Tata
Chemicals, Tata Steel, The Shaw Trust, TNT UK, Transport for London, UK Space Agency, Unilever, Westfield Stratford,
Wetherspoons, Wilmott Dixon, Whitbread, Yorkshire Water.
Source: The Sky’s the Limit, National Apprenticeship Service
Providers
Involved
Abingdon and Whitney College, Aim Academy, ATC, Babcock, Babington Business College, Barking and Dagenham
College, Barnsley College, Birmingham Metropolitan College, Blackburn College, BPP University College of Professional
Studies, Bradford College, Bromley College, BT Group PLC, Building Engineering Training Services, Cambridge Regional
College, Capita, Central Sussex College, Chichester College, City & Islington College, City of Bristol College, City of
Westminster College, College of NW London, Compass Group, Ealing, Hammersmith & West London College, Elmfield
Training, Hartlepool College, Havering College, Highbury College, Hull College, Impact Learning and Data Solutions, JHP
Group, Kaplan, Kidderminster Academy, Leeds City College, Leeds College of Building, Leek and Buxton College, Leicester
College, Loughborough College, Middlesex University, National Construction College, NESCOT, Newcastle College,
Newham College, Oaklands College, Pera Training, Rolls-Royce PLC, Selby College, Sheffield Hallam University, Skills
Solutions, South Essex College, Telford College of Arts and Technology, The Manchester College, University College
Birmingham, University of Derby, University of Greenwich, University of Plymouth, University of West of England, Uxbridge
College, Warrington College, Weston College, Workpays.
Source: LSIS, Higher Apprenticeship Research – Baseline Report
Progression in Apprenticeships
• Part of telling the FE “story”- good and bad
• University of Greenwich Progression of Apprentices to Higher Education (2013)
15.4% Advanced Apprenticeship progression contrasts with NAS research (2010)
which identifies 50% of apprentices who complete an Advanced Apprenticeship
show an interest in pursuing a degree-level equivalent course
– Suggests that 34.6% of learners completing an Advanced Apprenticeship show an
interest in pursuing a degree-level course but do not progress
– Suggests 50% of Advanced apprentices do not show an interest in progressing
• Work in the Agency is starting to establish the right metrics to determine trends
– Our interest is in showing both the impact and value for money of progression
Progression in Apprenticeships
• The growth of Higher Apprenticeships and the emphasis on workbased craft, technician, management / professional progression
routes may change attitudes and practice
– CBI report (July 2013) on new routes to higher skills strongly
supports the expansion and promotion of Apprenticeships and other
work-based “learn-while-you-earn” models to deliver on higher level
skills
– The importance of Apprenticeships at Levels 4 and 5 cannot be
underestimated
Why Reform?
•Poor feedback from customers
•Employers’ concerns over quality
•Insufficient tailoring to employer/sector needs
•Assessment can dominate
•Too complex to take on an Apprentice (Holt)
•Need to re-centre the agenda on employers
Richard Review
outcomes
•Funding and policy consultations complete
•Hundreds of views collated
•Implementation plan launched end of October
•Trailblazers will lead the way in 2013/14
– Defining standards for the first few occupations
– Establishment of final assessment process
•Reform will take several years to complete
•Important that HE is at the table of reform
Find out more..
www.apprenticeships.org.uk
www. apprentice.tv/category/higherapprenticeships