The Department for Education鈥檚 highlight that people in聽England with degree-level qualifications have higher employment rates and earn more over a聽lifetime than their non-graduate counterparts.
Employment rates for graduates are also higher 鈥 86.7聽per cent versus 70.2聽per cent, which is聽by no聽means an聽insignificant difference. The Office for National Statistics鈥 in 2015-16 even indicated that graduates have a聽鈥済reater sense of聽personal well-being鈥 and are 鈥渉appier鈥 than those without a聽university qualification.
Yet despite these very clear advantages of gaining higher-level qualifications, the DfE is ploughing on with reforms to (post-16) qualifications that run a serious risk of shutting down accessible pathways to university for many people from non-traditional backgrounds.
To put the scale of the issue into context, 15聽per cent of accepted applicants to a UK university last year held BTECs or other applied general qualifications 鈥 or a combination of them and A聽levels. This amounts to聽about .
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From 2025, however, most of these qualifications won鈥檛 exist in England, replaced by a far smaller number of two-year T-level courses. While I聽am supportive of these new technical-based qualifications, they are in no way a direct replacement for the ones that will be lost.
The reality is that T聽levels are academically rigorous and will not be suited to everyone studying for a BTEC. They are ultimately an A-level alternative for people who get at least five GCSEs, as opposed to being an alternative level聽1-3 vocational course for those who don鈥檛. In that sense, the government is wrongly pitching T聽levels against BTECs, when, in fact, they should be pitched against A聽levels.
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Many students currently choose to study a mix of A聽levels and BTECs 鈥 but this will not be possible with T聽levels, which are large yet narrow qualifications. The decision about which post-16 route to pursue will become completely binary, with no third way and no option for those who are unable to do A聽levels or T聽levels.
Consequently, these reforms will leave many people without an accessible or achievable pathway to university. The effect that this will have on social mobility is illustrated by the fact that 44聽per cent of white working-class university entrants studied for at least one BTEC, according to . The same report also highlighted the fact that more than a third (37聽per cent) of black students enter university with only BTEC qualifications. So the likely impact on EDI of shutting down BTECs is also clear to see.
The government is right to want to ensure that every qualification on offer is high-quality and relevant, and T聽levels are robust and good additions to the 濒别惫别濒听3 portfolio. But I聽am not arguing for the establishment of a two-tier system of qualifications, with one being lower quality than the other. Contrary to popular belief, the majority of university students with BTECs gain . The point is that T聽levels simply aren鈥檛 accessible to some people in the same way that BTECs and other vocational qualifications can be.
T聽levels will also take time to bed in. Hence, ministers are pursuing a risky strategy by sticking to the stipulated 2025 defunding point for BTECs. The inaugural T聽levels, which begin in 2024, won鈥檛 even have completed their two-year cycle by then, so the qualification鈥檚 success will be unproven.
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The government鈥檚 reforms should, instead, be focusing on creating a suite of flexible pathways that enable people from all backgrounds to progress successfully through levels of education and into fulfilling careers. This must include consideration of the one in five young people who leave school without five good GCSEs. A聽three-year post-16 programme is needed to enable such students to sustain their studies and progress to a higher level, but the reforms don鈥檛 cover this crucial element.
Modular, 鈥渂ite-sized鈥 濒别惫别濒听3 qualifications are also needed, which can be added to and built on. These would provide a truly accessible route to university entrance for people to fit around their lives and family commitments.
Such approaches would help rather than hinder the many disadvantaged groups who would benefit so greatly from the many life opportunities that higher education offers.
Sam Parrett is group principal and CEO of London South East Colleges.
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