Wednesday 30 March 2011

National programme gets over 100,000 adults learning

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From NIACE Community Learning Champions

In less than 18 months 2,000 registered Community Learning Champions have encouraged over 100,000 people - of whom over two-thirds (70 per cent) were unemployed - to take up learning in some of the country's most disadvantaged communities.

These are the headline figures, published in a report on Tuesday 29 March, to mark the end of the Community Learning Champions Support Programme - funded by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills and delivered by NIACE, unionlearn, the Workers' Educational Association and Martin Yarnit Associates.

Since its launch in October 2009 the Community Learning Champions Support Programme has funded 50 projects across the country to give volunteers the necessary skills and support to promote learning in their homes, workplaces and communities. Community Learning Champions have been instrumental in helping to transform individual lives and whole communities.

More..

 

Article first appeared at  http://www.niace.org.uk/news/national-programme-gets-over-100000-adults-learning

Tuesday 29 March 2011

Apprentices … you are needed at your workstation

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Employers are worried about new rules on the number of hours that apprentices must spend being taught

While schools and universities have been stung by recent budget cuts, vocational learning has fared somewhat better. Since the coalition government came to power last May, there has been sustained investment in apprenticeships, starting with £250m to fund 75,000 new adult apprenticeships, announced in the 2010 spending review.

In last week's budget, the chancellor, George Osborne, announced a £180m package for a further 50,000 apprenticeships, aimed at helping young people into work or training. While the investment is welcomed by colleges and training providers, they now face the challenge of finding employers to take on all these new apprentices. But convincing employers, particularly those in small- and medium-sized businesses, to invest their time and money in training has never been easy.

New government regulations, due to come into force next month, could make it even tougher. The Specification of Apprenticeship Standards for England (Sase) will require every apprentice to receive up to 280 hours of guided learning (time in education and training, away from their usual duties) each year.

Some employers are worried. Jonathan Morcom, operations director at the Duke of Cornwall hotel in Plymouth, is one. The hotel sends its apprentices to City College Plymouth for one day a week. Squeezing in more training time wouldn't be practical, he says. "It's important apprentices have time offsite with a learning provider, but 280 hours is excessive. Smaller employers, especially, will not be able to justify having their apprentices out of the workplace for that amount of time."

Grahame Howe, head of employer engagement at West Nottinghamshire College thinks this "one size fits all" approach will not work for apprenticeships. "While some sectors, like engineering, might require a lot of hours doing theoretical work in the classroom, others, such as some parts of the service industries, will need much less. We work with a big leisure company that is very good at training its staff away from the work environment. But even they are telling us they will find it difficult to arrange 100 hours of off-the-job training."

City of Sunderland College principal Angela O'Donoghue thinks setting a minimum number of guided learning hours is important for 16- to 19-year-olds, but feels placing the same expectations on adult apprentices is a mistake. "Young people need that support, that time to develop and grow, but for adults who may already have been in the workplace, is it really necessary? It's difficult enough for us to persuade employers to take on adult apprentices. Those who do it want a full-time employee not a four-day-a-week person. I'm worried this will make our job even harder."

But Chris Kirk, head of apprenticeships at City & Guilds, thinks fears about guided learning hours could be down to semantics. Some of the government documentation for Sase uses the phrase "off the job" to describe guided learning, which may have been misleading. A more accurate phrase might have been "away from your workstation", he argues. "The problem is that these government documents are often written by educationists with theoretical knowledge, but no hands-on experience of working in the sector. When you drill down into the guidance, only 30% of the 280 hours have to be spent away from everyday duties."

But he can understand why small- and medium-sized employers are worried. "We work with lots of big supermarkets that have their own training departments, so guided learning can be done inhouse with minimal impact. But in a smaller outfit, you can easily see how a couple of hours with travel time could easily turn into a day, which could impact on the business."

The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) has now clarified what it means by guided learning as "traditional classroom learning; e-learning; distance learning; coaching; mentoring; feedback; collaborative/networked learning with peers; guided study; planning and review". This must offer access "as and when required" for the learner either to a tutor, mentor, supervisor or manager.

A BIS spokesperson says: "The new specification of apprenticeship standards will enshrine and enhance the quality of the apprenticeships programme, guaranteeing a minimum allocation of 280 hours of guided learning to equip every apprentice with the specific skills employers need."

But Paul Warner, director of delivery at the Association of Learning Providers, feels there is still potential for confusion. "If an electrician goes out on a job with his boss which throws up the opportunity to try out a new technique or concept, can this be called guided learning?" While supportive of the government's attempt to introduce a quality benchmark, he believes a minimum number of guided learning hours could simply be introducing an unnecessary layer of bureaucracy.

Traditionally, sector skills councils (employer-led organisations responsible for developing skills and standards in different sectors) have set the minimum number of hours necessary to complete a particular apprenticeship (many of which exceed 280 hours anyway), which are used by awarding bodies when they design qualifications.

If colleges and training providers also have to provide evidence they have met the standards, it could mean doubling up on paperwork, says Warner. "Providers may well end up spending extra money on administration – money that could be better directed at the learner." He highlights another potential sticking point. Under the new rules, guided learning hours have to be completed within contracted working hours, which could be particularly problematic for apprentices in customer-facing sectors. The trainee chef who gets to work early to practise a new technique, or the hairdressing apprentice who wants to take part in a training session when the salon is closed to the public, may find their efforts cannot be counted as guided learning.

The new standards have been introduced in response to the Apprenticeships, Skills, Learning and Children Act, which was set in motion by the previous Labour government but came into force last September. Despite the 18-month build-up, getting through red tape means many sector skills councils and awarding bodies do not yet have everything in place for April, when the new standards are introduced.

Terry Watts, chief executive of Proskills, the sector skills council for process manufacturing, says many employers feel as if the changes have been rushed through at the last minute without any real consideration of "how things might work on the shop-floor".

Charlie Mullins, director of Pimlico Plumbers, agrees: "On paper it's a positive move back to the way things used to be; the way they should be if we're going to tackle the UK's skills shortage. The problem we face, of course, is that it's great to fund all these 'new apprenticeships', but each and every one of them requires a job so the apprentice can put in their hours while they're training and that's where things come unstuck."


The Guardian

Monday 28 March 2011

Michael Gove unveils cutprice replacement for EMAs

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From The Guardian

Education secretary Michael Gove has undertaken another policy U-turn when he announced a more generous than expected replacement for the education maintenance allowance, setting aside £180m a year.

But the new scheme – described as "16-19 bursaries" – represents a cut of two-thirds from the previous £560m annual budget and will be targeted only at the poorest students, so depriving hundreds of thousands of students of state support for further education.

More...

Article first appeared at  http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/mar/28/gove-unveils-cutprice-replacement-emas

Thursday 24 March 2011

Worcester sixth form college information evening

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Thursday 7th April 2011
4.30pm - 5.30pm

Worcester Sixth Form College
Spetchley Road, Worcester
WR5 2LU

To book a place and receive the advice you are looking for
Tel: 01905 362600
email: enquiries@wsfc.ac.uk
www.wsfc.ac.uk

Get out and about with book (From Worcester News)

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11:50pm Monday 21st March 2011


Worcestershire boasts some of the most magnificent and historically fascinating landscapes in Britain.

And a new 112-page book will help you get the best out of the county and its scenery.

Based on Julie Royle’s long-running weekend walks series in the Worcester News, Worcestershire Walks is a full-colour A4-sized book.

It contains 50 easy-to-moderate routes. Each is accompanied by a photograph, map, directions and commentary about the scenery and history connected with it.

The book also contains walks in Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire and Warwickshire. Advance orders for the book, priced £6.99, are being taken at the following newspaper offices:

• Worcester News, Berrows House, Hylton Road, Worcester WR2 5JX;
• Kidderminster Shuttle, Tower Buildings, Kidderminster DY10 2DY;
• Stourbridge News, St John’s House, St John’s Road, Stourbridge DY8 1EH;
• Evesham Journal, Sapphire House, Crab Apple Way, Vale Park, Evesham WR11 1GP;
• Hereford Times, Holmer Road, Hereford HR4 9BX.

Alternatively, order it by post. Include a cheque for £8.24 made out to Newsquest (Midlands South) Ltd to cover the cost of the book plus postage, and send to Worcestershire Walks, Newspaper Sales, Berrows House, Hylton Road, Worcester WR2 5JX.

Please allow 28 days for delivery. You can also order over the phone if you wish to pay by credit credit card on 01905 742333.

Wednesday 23 March 2011

Value for money of 16-18 education questioned | Education | guardian.co.uk

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Whitehall's spending watchdog has warned that some of the £6bn spent each year on educating 16- to 18-year-olds may be going to waste.

The National Audit Office said it was impossible to judge whether the government was getting value for money from sixth-form colleges, school sixth forms and further education colleges because they report their data in different ways.

It said some schools and colleges have a "poor" understanding of how to manage their staff budget, which for some accounts for more than 60% of their costs.

Its report – Getting value for money from the education of 16- to 18-year-olds – warns that the government should be wary of encouraging new schools to have sixth forms to increase competition because this may reduce the choice of subjects and quality of teaching on offer to pupils.

"Providers with many learners are able to offer a greater choice of courses, so course choice can be diminished where there are relatively large numbers of smaller providers in an area," the report states. "New providers generally start small and need time to build up their student numbers. If, however, new providers do not grow to a cost-effective size, then increasing choice of providers may lead to lower quality, high-cost providers and reduced choice of courses for learners."

The report found that pupils in the largest sixth forms had the best academic results.

"Across most of the main measures of learner achievement, performance has improved nationally over the last four years," it states. However, it said there was "no consistent approach" to dealing with poor performance in school sixth forms and details on inspections and financial reporting requirements were inconsistent.

Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, said that while there were some positive indicators of value for money, "a number of issues will need to be addressed, including performance management and accountability arrangements, before I can conclude that value for money is being delivered across the board".

Responsibility for overseeing the education of 16- to 18-year-olds is shared between the Department for Education, the Young People's Learning Agency and local authorities.

A Lifelong Lifeline? NIACE

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Article by NIACE

By 2025, it's estimated that over one-in-five (22 per cent) of the UK's population will be pensioners. With the economic downturn and the state pension age set to rise, older people will need to work longer whilst continuing to develop their skills. Those that are in retirement risk being excluded as more and more information and services will need to be accessed digitally.

The lecture - New Technology and Lifelong Learning in an Ageing Society - will address how the right learning opportunities can ensure that an ageing society isn't left behind in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.

Monday 21 March 2011

Myfriends online week | NIACE

Myfriends online week Monday, March 21, 2011 - 11:01

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IT tutor teaching an older sheltered housing resident as part of the Get Digital scheme

Age UK's myfriends online week is encouraging older adults to discover the social side of the internet and learn the latest ways to make new friends and keep in touch with old friends and family.

In the last year, NIACE - together with Digital Unite - has been helping the two-thirds of people over 65 who live in sheltered housing but can't get online, through the Get Digital scheme. Get Digital has funded 196 sheltered housing schemes across the country, enabling them to buy computers, software and other digital equipment, as well as providing in-house IT training for residents.

To support other sheltered housing schemes in investing in similar digital inclusion projects once the Get Digital scheme ends this month, resources - including good practice guides, case studies and learning materials - have been developed for scheme managers to help sustain the learning. These can be accessed for free online at www.getdigital.org.uk.

Some of the 8,000 older residents that have taken part in and benefitted from existing Get Digital schemes have said:

Nancy - "[The Internet] is the kind of thing that if you don't get a handle on, you're going to be lost in this world. I've been dying to get computers. My family and grandchildren are all in America and they have skype and a webcam and I can talk to them. It's just opened up a whole world."

My family and grandchildren are all in America and they have skype and a webcam and I can talk to them. It's just opened up a whole world.

Nancy

Alice - "Things are changing rapidly [but] you don't have to go outside to learn anything, it's all inside the building. I always want to learn something new. It's nice and it makes you feel young again despite your age."

Eula - "I'm learning so much information that I can also pass on to the people here, to help them."

Alastair Clark, NIACE Senior Programme Director, said:

"Isolation really can affect the quality of life for older adults and modern digital communications can play a vital part in overcoming this. We know from our research and from our front-line work that older adults have so much to gain from learning the skills to use the digital world. Contacting friends and family can be a great motivator."

Saturday 19 March 2011

Twenty largest student debts revealed

19 March 2011 Last updated at 14:58

Twenty largest student debts revealed

By Julia Ross Freedom of Information researcher
Oxford graduates

The biggest debt currently owed to the Student Loans Company is £66,150, the BBC has learned.

A Freedom of Information request has revealed that the total sum of the 20 largest student debts is over £1m.

All but one of the students went to London institutions, where loans for living costs are higher, and were on courses that lasted a minimum of five years, like medicine and law.

Universities Minister David Willetts said the amounts owed were "unusual".

If these people were training to become lawyers or doctors they were likely to have substantial earnings later on in life, he told BBC Radio 4's Money Box programme.

Higher future debts predicted

Students in England can currently borrow almost £5,000 a year to cover their tuition fees and living costs, and undergraduates in London can receive up to £7,000.

But the maximum tuition fee loan in England will go up to £9,000 in September 2012, and maintenance loans will also rise.

Student debts could then reach £83,000 when the new system is introduced in England in 2012.

Figures calculated by leading accountants, show that a student borrowing £39,000 for a three-year course could pay back that amount in total, in cash terms.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Universities have money to help students who are in financial difficulties; bursaries, the Access to Learning fund and scholarships”

End Quote Lynne Condell Chair of NASMU

'Graduate tax'

Mr Willetts accepted that the loans would take longer to be repaid under the new system, but he said monthly payments would be smaller.

"Under the proposed new system, you will pay 9% on all your earnings over £21,000, instead of the current threshold of £15,000," he said.

"If you earned £25,000, repayments would be about £30 a month.

"The burden of the monthly repayment is what really matters to people."

He conceded the new proposals would constitute a "graduate tax".

Managing repayments

Students should not be put off by the headlines, according to Lynne Condell, who chairs the National Association of Student Money Advisers.

She said the monthly repayments are manageable and that going to university is an investment.

"There's so much value in going to university. It's not just about the money - it's a life changing experience," she said.

Students should plan their finances ahead and look for alternative benefits and support, Ms Condell advised.

"Universities have money to help students who are in financial difficulties; bursaries, the Access to Learning fund and scholarships, which hopefully will still be available in 2012," she said.

"If students have mortgages or children, or have a disability, lots of support is available to them, but nothing is given automatically, so students should seek advice to check which benefits they are eligible for."

Under the new system, which starts in September 2012 any unpaid debt will be written off after 30 years.

Making Staff Count | NIACE

Making Staff Count Tuesday, March 15, 2011 - 10:02

Making Staff Count book front cover

Making Staff Count - available online as a free download - outlines the benefits of addressing numeracy and shows how some local authorities have created opportunities for numeracy learning. It will help Senior Managers, HR Managers and elected members of local authorities to focus on the workplace as a site for numeracy learning.

Sue Southwood, NIACE Programme Director and one of the authors of Making Staff Count, said:

"Many councils have recognised that improving the literacy and numeracy skills of frontline workers has a positive impact on the quality of service delivery. Some have even reported improvements in staff retention and reductions in staff absenteeism, but more needs to be done to encourage adults in the workplace to improve their numeracy. Making Staff Count has been developed to help local authorities at a time when the way they deliver services to their communities is changing and staff need to be proficient at understanding and interpreting local needs in order to respond effectively."

Councillor Ian Fowler, Deputy Leader Blackpool Borough Council, said:

"Any publication that helps get our staff interested in learning is of great value. Literacy and numeracy are vital tools to have at our fingertips if we are to improve ourselves and our families' outcomes. We work in a local authority area that has high levels of deprivation and transience, so it is important that we up-skill our staff so that they can see that there is a way out of low-skill, low-achievement jobs and that a brighter future is attainable."

Friday 18 March 2011

University of Worcester Census 2011

Author: kate gynn

Census 2011
All students whether living in halls or residence or off campus accommodation are legally required to complete the census. The census is a count of the whole population of the UK that happens every 10 years.

What if I don’t complete the census form?
You will be liable for a fine of up to £1,000

When do I do it?
Census day is the 27th March, complete your questionnaire online or on paper around this date.

I live in Halls of Residence
The process will be slightly different. You can still complete online or on paper but you will need to post your form in the special drop off boxes in either St Johns or City Campus reception.


Hive-Worcester

Wednesday 16 March 2011

Girls are smarter than boys when it comes to spending at university – survey finds | Money | guardian.co.uk

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Young men at university spend more time talking on phone, buying clothes and eating out with friends than female students, according to a survey by the Student Loans Company, which found that about the only thing that boys skimp on is the rent.

The SLC said that, on average, girls spend nearly £1,500 less than boys every year at university. Beer is the biggest difference - with boys clocking up £76 a month in pubs and clubs compared to £46 spent by girls. They also spend much more heavily on food (£76 compared to £60) every month, and twice as much on sports (£25 versus £14).

The survey debunks a number of gender stereotypes around spending, revealing that on average males at university spend £34 a month on clothes compared to the £31 spent by females. They also spend more on restaurants - £37 a month compared to £29, and more on their phones, £29 compared to £22.

But the SLC says that part of the reason why females spend less than males at college is that they are often better at shopping around for the best deals on a range of goods from gas and electricity to phones and broadband. Around half of female students buy second hand textbooks, compared to one-third of male students, it found.

Financial expert Jasmine Birtles, who has produced a guide to student finance at moneymagpie.com/tag/students says: "It's sad, but it still seems to be the case that girls master household management before boys. Maybe we should blame their mothers for not teaching boys in the same way. It's also amazing how few boys can even manage the basics of cooking when they arrive at university and end up spending more as a result.

"But I was surprised to find from the survey that girls spend less on clothes than boys. My guess is that girls will look around for the latest £20 off at Asos and share that with their friends, or buy in Primark, while boys don't shop around so much."

The SLC carried out the survey to prod males into applying earlier for a student loan. The application process is open now, but every year the SLC finds that females are much more likely to apply early and meet the final deadline than males.

Andy Topham, assessment manager for the SLC, said: "Our research shows that female students are the best at applying for their student finance – online and on time. September might seem a long way off, but it is really important that students act now and don't wait until their place at university has been confirmed. Students can apply now by visiting Studentfinance. This is the best way to make sure they get the first instalment of their loan at the start of the term at university. There is also a calculator on the website that students can use to work out how much money they are entitled to."

Etsy: how much social is too much?

web design Ashton Under Hill
Posted 16 March 2011 13:00pm by Patricio Robles with 0 comments

Online businesses face many challenges these days. Internet users are more sophisticated, and more demanding. And in many markets, they're also very social.

Thanks to the popularity and ubiquity of services like Facebook and Twitter, that means many website owners are compelled to find ways to make their sites more social.

However, going social isn't always easy, and it comes with plenty of risks...

Etsy, a popular community-based marketplace for all things handcrafted, is learning that the hard way after introducing a new People Search feature designed to make it easier for Etsy users to interact.

Ars Technica's Jacqui Cheng explains:

Etsy had flipped the switch on its new People Search tool last week as part of its effort to make the site into more of a social media platform. When users run a search for a person's full name, that user's account will show up in the search results, even if that person is only a buyer. The goal is to allow users to connect to each other and create "Circles," which then allow users to see which products their friends have marked as favorites or purchased on Etsy.

Problems immediately began popping up. For one, buyers who had entered their full names into their Etsy profiles in the past were not all aware that the information would become public as a result of the People Search rollout. (Etsy claims it notified users, but numerous Etsy users insisted otherwise.) Then, users began noticing that they could easily look up a buyer's past purchases by searching for their real names, pulling up their profile pages, and examining the feedback left for or by Etsy sellers.

While there can be no doubt that some Etsy users are not happy, according to Etsy's CEO and COO, much of the outrage is unwarranted and "there is a lot of misinformation being spread".

Ignoring the People Search functionality which seems to be what has users most upset, they do acknowledge that users who enter their real names could have their purchases revealed, but they also explained their rationale for the change that allowed this to occur: "we believe that markets are conversations".

When put in historical context, it appears that Etsy, like so many other sites, is looking for ways to become more 'social'.

That is understandable. The general trend on the internet is that services are being made more social, both through homegrown features and integrations with third-parties like Facebook. For obvious reasons, many businesses want to jump on the trend.

But is this always a good thing? If you can make a site more social, should you? The answer: not always.

In the case of Etsy, there's already a vibrant, passionate community that forms a solid base for a promising young business.

Sure, Etsy isn't a 'social network', but Facebook doesn't represent the only kind of community that's possible on the internet. You can build successful communities online without simply adding a sprinkling of standard social networking features. Etsy is already but one example of that.

Naturally, as sites evolve, they should look at the ways new social features can be incorporated. In many cases, these features are a competitive necessity.

But at the same time, the feature mix is more important than the volume of features. For sites that already house impressive communities, the old adage "If it isn't broke, don't try to fix it" may not be the worst strategy.

Learn more...

Econsultancy's Social Media and Online PR Report examines how companies are using online PR tactics and social media sites such as Twitter for marketing and customer service. Econsultancy has also published Social Media and Online PR Template Files, which you can adapt and use for your own projects. For innovation in this space, download our Innovation Report.

Patricio Robles is a tech reporter at Econsultancy. Follow him on Twitter.

Tuesday 15 March 2011

Join The Worcester Library In March & Win A Prize! | Worcestershire Literary Festival

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Join The Worcester Library In March & Win A Prize!


Worcester City Library have launched a “refer a friend or relative” scheme in a bit to encourage people to come forward and join the library in March.

Every time a current library user encourages a friend or relation to join the library they will enter their library card number in to a prize draw to win a £25.00 voucher from the Little Ginger Pig Company for a meal at their bistro in Copenhagen Street.

The more people you encourage to join the library in March 2011 the more chances you will have to win.  The prize draw will be done on 1st April and the winner will be notified by 7th April. Worcestershire Libraries are running an adult membership campaign throughout March and are looking to attract at least 1000 new members.  There will be a photo opportunity when the winner is presented with their prize during week begining 10th April.

For more information please contact Nicki Hitchcock at Worcester City Library on 01905 822722 or email WorcesterLib@worcestershire.gov.uk.

Monday 14 March 2011

Simon Hughes calls for £100m to help poorer students | Politics | The Guardian

Simon Hughes is pushing the Treasury to adopt a multimillion-pound package to support 16- to 19-year-olds staying on at school and college, as pre-budget negotiations across Whitehall enter their final stages.

The Lib Dem deputy leader is lobbying for a compromise solution after the coalition set out plans to abolish the education and maintenance allowance (EMA).

Hughes's battle takes place as news emerges that the budget is likely to include plans to relax employment laws.

The budget, announced on 23 March, will show the extent of the government's shift of ideas in trying to get the British economy growing.

Hughes has drawn up a package that includes help for students with free travel and the continuation of free school meals, as well as some extra targeted help on books. The cost of the proposals is said to be well over £100m, but the precise sum will depend on the mix accepted by the chancellor, George Osborne. Hughes has been holding talks with students across the country to see what discretionary help he can offer students angered by the EMA's abolition.

The Comprehensive Spending Review last October set out plans to abolish the EMA on the basis that it was poorly targeted, but the move led to an outcry and the appointment of Hughes as advocate for access to education. The EMA provided grants of up to £30 a week to children whose parents earn less than £30,800.

Hughes said the bulk of the proposed new help would help children travel to further education.

On SundayIt emerged that the government is preparing to cut employment rights to benefit small businesses. Leaked details from the "growth review", due to be announced in the budget, suggest a relaxation of maternity leave laws which currently allow women up to a year's statutory leave. They hope instead that new companies with 10 or fewer employees could be given the right to negotiate leave with their workers. Mark Prisk, the business minister, was reported to be due to meet business leaders in the next few days to discuss the plans.

The coalition government recently brought in radical reforms, from April, to allow both parents to share the leave, also opposed by business leaders.

Despite this being a priority, one cabinet minister told the Guardian that employment rights would be relaxed in order to try to kickstart growth.

The employment relations minister, Ed Davey, told the Guardian: "I think you can balance fairness up with flexibility and I think the last government got that balance wrong. Partly because I think they were listening slightly too much to the unions and not enough to business, they went in the wrong direction. One of the things we're trying to do is both rectify some of that, and that's not something you can do in a few months, it takes a while and we're going to be at this employment law review for the whole parliament."

Labour leader Ed Miliband and shadow chancellor Ed Balls are to hold a joint press conference where they will call for a cut in VAT on fuel, and reveal plans to use the bank bonus tax to boost jobs and construction. In the last year of the Labour government, a bank bonus tax raised £3.5bn which, if repeated this year, could bring in revenue to help combat youth unemployment and a job shortage in construction, they will say.

Friday 11 March 2011

Celebrating Community Learning Champions

As the Community Learning Champions' Support Programme - funded by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) - draws to an end later this month, a NIACE event on Wednesday 9 March celebrated its success by highlighting how lives are transformed when learning champions are given effective resources, support and training. A report on the work of the national support programme - featuring case studies of projects and individual Community Learning Champions - will be published on 29 March 2011.

 

Attendees at the event heard from John Hayes, the Minister of State for Lifelong Learning, Further Education and Skills, about the wider role of the volunteers in delivering the Government's Big Society ambitions. He said:

 

"We cannot underestimate the positive impact of the Community Learning Champions project. The Big Society is a place where people, neighbourhoods and communities have more power and responsibility and use it to create better services. Community Learning Champions are becoming an established part of the Big Society."

 

Other speakers included Liz Cousins, Project Manager of the Community Learning Champions Support Programme, and Carol Taylor, Director of Operations at NIACE. Films to showcase the work of Community Learning Champions were also launched at the event.

Since October 2009 the programme - delivered by NIACE, unionlearn, the Workers' Educational Association (WEA) and Martin Yarnit Associates - has provided training and development opportunities for 50 funded projects across the country; the projects have in turn produced 2,000 registered Community Learning Champions. The programme has also raised the profile of Community Learning Champions through a national register, a nationally recognised badge and a website.

 

 

Community Champions

 

Hive-Worcester

Wednesday 9 March 2011

Funding gap leads to calls for tuition fees for Scottish universities

An end to free higher education in Scotland is feared, after Universities Scotland, the body representing Scotland's university principals has said students may have to pay towards the cost of their degrees.

It says that higher education should be 'free at the point of entry and throughout study' but that graduates who go on to earn reasonable salaries should be asked to pay.

The principals are worried that Scottish universities are beginning to fall behind the standards of those in England and are warning that institutions in Scotland will be left with a huge funding gap after tuition fees are raised in England - the case for a 'fair and modest' payment by Scottish graduates was now 'unanswerable' if current levels of teaching and student numbers were to be maintained.

This has increased pressure on the next Scottish government, as English universities are preparing to charge between £6,000 and £9,000 a year in fees. But the Scottish government's First Minister, Alex Salmond told MSPs a 'distinctive Scottish' solution was needed, and that the government would set out fresh options for funding before the end of the year - however he insisted that a return to tuition fees had been ruled out and said no decisions would be made until all those who have an interest, including students, the universities and staff, have offered their views.

The country's leading colleges are now facing strikes, laying off staff and closing departments. Glasgow is planning to shut its modern languages and anthropology departments, while staff at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh are to take industrial action.

The National Union of Students Scotland has added its voice to the debate, demanding that free tuition should be retained in Scotland. A demo under the banner Reclaim Your Voice, to be held on 22 March in Edinburgh will seek to reinforce their views.

http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/news/item.htm?pid=5698

The Complete University Guide

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Tuesday 8 March 2011

BTecs to get national results day

It looks like a bold decision. An exam board affected by controversy over the use of vocational courses to help schools rise up league tables is about to open up its data for full media scrutiny.

Edexcel is to hold a national results day in July, Education Guardian can reveal, when detailed statistics on hundreds of thousands of pupils' achievements in its increasingly popular BTec courses, which under Labour were controversially given equivalence to GCSE and A-levels in the rankings, will be published.

The publication plans aim to mirror the format of GCSE and A-level results days in August, which have become a staple of the annual news cycle and provoke now ritualised debates over rising and falling standards.

The board's decision, which may raise the profile of BTecs, represents an attempt by Edexcel to take the initiative in the ongoing and often bitterly contested publicity battle over vocational courses.

Last week's report on the subject for the government by Professor Alison Wolf, of King's College, London, said that league table pressures were pushing schools to encourage pupils to take non-GCSE courses that were of questionable worth to their futures, because of the qualifications' value to the school's statistics. This, she said, was "immoral".

Michael Gove, the education secretary, in the forward to the Wolf report said league tables incentivised schools to offer "inadequate" qualifications to 14- to 16-year-olds, although he did not name such qualifications and Edexcel can point to research suggesting that BTecs increase people's long-term earnings.

BTecs, coursework-only qualifications, which are offered at four levels in subjects ranging from applied science to health and social care, have been one of the fastest growing syllabuses in their GCSE-equivalent form. BTec Firsts, taken by 562,086 students, mainly aged 14 to 16, last year, have more than doubled in popularity over the past three years. This has been triggered, it is widely claimed, by a system that deems them to be worth up to four GCSEs for league table purposes.

Statistics published in the Wolf report showed that the contribution of BTec Firsts to national results figures for 16-year-olds, which incorporate both GCSE grades and results achieved in vocational qualifications, has been surging.

National figures for 2010 showed that 75% of 16-year-olds gained five or more A*-C grades at GCSE or vocational equivalent. Without BTecs, the figure would have been 65%, meaning these non-GCSE courses contributed 10 percentage points to this overall figure, compared to only 0.1 percentage points in 2005. BTec Firsts were the largest contributor to the national figures after GCSE.

The more advanced BTec Nationals, for 16- to 18-year-olds, which have a more established following in colleges and sixth forms, had 216,875 entries last year.

Edexcel's move is an attempt to redress another long-standing criticism around non-mainstream academic qualifications: that while GCSE and A-level grade data is available and scrutinised by the media every year, it has been impossible to gain similar information on other qualifications taken in schools and colleges.

There have been anecdotal claims that very high percentages of students pass GCSE-equivalent BTecs and another set of non-GCSE courses, OCR Nationals, run by the Oxford, Cambridge and Royal Society of Arts board.

Data revealed to the Times Educational Supplement last summer showed BTec First pass rates running at around 80%, although the same data was not made available for OCR Nationals.

In July, Edexcel will not only make information on BTec pass rates available in individual subjects, but also the proportion of entries awarded a merit or distinction grade; the relative popularity and success rates of individual subjects among boys, and among girls; and a breakdown of statistics by regions across the UK.

The data is to be released on the same day as the board announces the winners of a new awards scheme recognising outstanding BTec students, teachers and schools/colleges. Entries for these awards open today.

In recent years, the education charity Edge has run a national "VQ" (vocational qualifications) day in June, which celebrates successful non-academic learning. However, sceptics have said the fact that VQ day does not release detailed results data diminishes its impact on national reporting.

Rod Bristow, president of Pearson UK, which runs Edexcel, says: "We think it's high time that learners who are doing really valuable vocational qualifications like BTec are recognised for the excellence they achieve.

"We need an evidence-based debate, to try to discourage some of the snobbery that there is around vocational learning and vocational qualifications, and it's really important that we provide transparency."

The board acknowledges that the publicity the results day will generate may well be double-edged. GCSE and A-level results are certainly high profile, but the debate over "dumbing down" that ensues every summer is dispiriting for many young people.

However, sources at Edexcel say the board can no longer stand by a lack of transparency over BTec results, especially given the coalition's stated commitment to being open with data.

Anastasia de Waal, head of family and education at the Civitas thinktank, who has criticised schools' use of vocational qualifications, says: "This is welcome, not least because it is transparency that really is desperately needed when it comes to particular vocational qualifications taken in schools.

"The way the statistics have worked in the past, different qualifications have got bundled up in one measure so that it's been very difficult to find out what it means."

Alan Smithers, director of Buckingham University's centre for education and employment research, says he has struggled in the past to obtain BTec data from Edexcel. He says: "People are not aware of these qualifications in the way they should be. So anything that puts data in the public domain has to be a good thing."

The OCR board awarded 250,000 grades at GCSE equivalent last year through its OCR National vocational courses. But it appears to have no plans for a similar day, and pass/merit/distinction figures for these courses still seem not to be available to the public.

"OCR celebrates the achievement of all its students when they receive an award rather than picking out a few at a random point in the calendar. We congratulate Pearson/Edexcel on raising the profile of all vocational qualifications during the academic exam season."

Whether Edexcel's move towards transparency will be followed by other awarding bodies, then, remains to be seen. But, given reporters' general enthusiasm for statistics, it seems likely to generate media interest.

Sunday 6 March 2011

Keep studying Maths and English - Students are told

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Teenagers in England should be forced to study maths and English until they have a good standard in both subjects, a key government education adviser has said.

In a government-commissioned review into vocational education, Professor Alison Wolf, an expert in public policy, found only 45% of 16-year-olds achieve a C in GCSE maths and Engish and just 4% of those who fail the subjects go on to re-sit them and achieve a C grade or higher.

"It's an absolute scandal," Wolf said. "No young person should go out into the working world without a good level of English and maths," she told educationalists at the launch of her review in central London. They should go on study leave to get the qualifications if they do not achieve them the first time, she added. The subjects should be compulsory up to the age of 19.

Wolf said in other European countries knowledge in these subjects was taken more seriously. "We have told young people in the UK that [non-GCSE qualifications] are equivalent to GCSEs in English and maths and when they arrive at college they have discovered they aren't. It is immoral," she said.

Up to 400,000 teenagers are wasting their time on publicly funded college courses that do not lead to jobs or further training, Wolf added.

"There has been a lot of vocational education that has been pointless. Young people would have been better off had they not spent their time on these courses. They go in and out of education, trying to secure jobs but not getting them." She said the problem lay with qualifications and the system, rather than young people.

Wolf will tell the government to ensure the funding for practical education follows students. At the moment, colleges are funded according to how many students they put in for qualifications and the number of courses they offer.

The number of vocational qualifications has boomed in the past decade and many fear that some courses are not of sufficient quality. One of the leading exam boards, Edexcel, has said the number of students signed up to its vocational qualifications has risen from 66,000 in 2003 to more than 700,000.

She said work experience should no longer be a requirement for 14- to 16-year-olds because it was very difficult to find enough placements. But she said businesses should be paid to hire 16-year-olds as apprentices. "Employers should be subsidised for offering teenagers high-quality training. All students on practical courses should be forced to continue to study some academic subjects, such as maths," she said.

The education secretary, Michael Gove, said he would consider the recommendations. "We already know what good looks like," he said. "Apprenticeships at BT or Rolls-Royce are more oversubscribed than the most desirable course at the best university." He said many young people were competing in "life's career race crippled from the start".

It has emerged that one qualification in "personal effectiveness" teaches teenagers how to claim unemployment benefits and use a telephone. It is offered by the Asdan charity, was taken by nearly 11,000 people last year and is worth one GCSE.

Martin Doel, the Association of Colleges chief executive, said the difficulties facing young people in the labour market were not a reflection of the quality of vocational education.

"They are instead fundamentally related to the state of the economy, the challenges colleges and others face in picking up the pieces, where pupils leave school with few or no qualifications and an education system that has centrally prescribed qualifications."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/mar/03/retake-maths-english-gcse-educ...

 

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Saturday 5 March 2011

World Book Day | Worcestershire Literary Festival

World Book Day

Bibliophiles rejoice! Today (3 March) is International World Book Day!

The event, first held in Spain in 1995 and organised by UNESCO, is held every year to promote reading publishing and copyright. In the UK it is always the first Thursday of March. Millions of schoolchildren will be given £1 book tokens along with initiatives such as Spread The Word, Quick Reads Initiative and Books for Hospitals to encourage reading.

We at Worcestershire Literary Festival will be breaking open some bubbly later (or supermarket brand lemonade at least) to celebrate. Hope you all enjoy the day and why not settle down with a favourite book?

Thursday 3 March 2011

LLUK Launch new Client Entitlement Statement for adult career service users

The new ‘Client Entitlement Statement’ for adult career service users has been published on the Lifelong Learning UK website.  The statement clearly explains the level of service that all users of adult information, advice and guidance services should receive.  It has been designed to promote good practice and client-focused service within the adult career guidance sector.

We commissioned the International Centre for Guidance Studies to undertake this work in 2010/11.  They developed the following, in consultation with potential clients and existing service users:

“As a user of adult careers services in the UK I am entitled to a service:

1.      Which is responsive to the needs of all users

2.      Where staff are well-trained, knowledgeable and suitably qualified to do their jobs

3.      Which motivates me and inspires me to consider all opportunities open to me

4.      Which is personal to me

5.      Which helps me to gain the skills I need to make my career goals a reality

6.      Which provides the support I need to be successful

7.      Which helps me access any additional support I need

8.      Where I am safe and where my personal information is respected and protected.”

This list of eight statements is accompanied by guidance which provides useful examples of good practice and activities.  Career guidance organisations can use these to assess the extent to which they are currently meeting the Statement, and to develop strategies to enhance their service provision.
By Kateg
See full article and download the documents here

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Tuesday 1 March 2011

The WLF Presents…A Live Reading Of P G Wodehouse’s Classic “Carry On Jeeves” – To Raise Funds For Comic Relief | Worcestershire Literary Festival

The Worcestershire Literary Festival is proud to announce a special live reading of “Carry On Jeeves” by P G Wodehouse which will take place at Worcester City Library from 10.30am till 2.00pm, then at Waterstones book shop in Worcester from 3.00pm till 7.00pm.

Like the 2 day reading of “The Hobbit” we will be again raising funds for chairty and this reading will tie in with Comic Relief Day.

So far we have the following people taking part and reading one of the short stories in the book:

Tom Stanhope
Myfanwy Fox
Maggie Doyle
Lisa Ventura
Owen Fleet

If you would like to read one of the short stories in the book, or help us with the fundraising side of the event, please contact lisa@worcslitfest.com or message Lisa Ventura via Facebook, or leave a note on the wall of this event.

We raised just over £300 for Children In Need, let’s see if we can top this amount for Comic Relief!

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