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Will anyone in England take up their lifelong learning entitlement?

The LLE is seen as a key part of maintaining employability in rapidly changing employment sectors. Yet with less than six months to go before applications open for the stand-alone modules central to the vision, interest among learners and providers alike appears lukewarm at best. Helen Packer reports

Published on
April 20, 2026
Last updated
April 20, 2026
Ice cream van on empty beach with owner looking for customers. To illustrate that interest among learners and providers for the lifelong learning entitlement appears lukewarm at best.
Source: Getty Images/Alamy montage

Amid all the furore in England over the perceived unfairness of student loan debt repayment terms, it might be argued that this is the worst possible time to be launching a whole new species of courses for a whole new cadre of learners, to be funded by a big expansion in loan eligibility.

Yet the lifelong learning entitlement (LLE) has long been seen to be vital to address another pressure of modern working life: the likely need 鈥 particularly given the disruption being wrought by AI 鈥 for large numbers of people to retrain in order to remain employable.

will offer four years of undergraduate-level loan funding across a person鈥檚 lifetime, and, unlike under current loan terms, learners will be able to spend it on courses at the same level as or lower level than qualifications they have previously obtained. Indeed, the central idea is that students of all ages will be able to study as many stand-alone modules 鈥 potentially from a range of different institutions 鈥 as they feel they need to boost their skills; this will often fall far short, in credit terms, of a full degree.

The policy was first聽announced聽by Boris Johnson in 2020, after the Augar Review of post-18 education recommended a similar scheme the previous year. However, progress in implementing it was limited by the subsequent rapid turnover of prime ministers and the fiscal hole caused by Liz Truss鈥 disastrous 鈥渕ini-budget鈥 in 2022, leading to widespread doubts that the LLE would ever be implemented. Planned starting dates in September 2025聽and January 2026 were pushed back again聽after Labour鈥檚 2024 election victory to January 2027. But that date now appears to be set in stone 鈥 regardless of students鈥 and institutions鈥 readiness.

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That long implementation process should have given plenty of time for awareness and interest in the LLE to build among the mature and non-traditional learners at whom it is primarily aimed 鈥 and plenty of time for universities to rejig their teaching around the self-contained modules it is intended primarily to fund. Yet with less than nine months to go until its launch, and less than six months out from students being able to apply for LLE-eligible courses, large swathes of the higher education sector appear to be a long way from that position 鈥 if they are even trying to move towards it.

Polling released in February found that only 12 per cent of the general public was aware of the LLE. And while the sector, in theory, is supportive of shaking up a one-size-fits-all loan model aimed at three-year degrees pursued in early adulthood, the financial crisis that has left around half of English higher education institutions facing a financial deficit in the current academic year has made universities wary of investing significant amounts in adopting a new and largely untested teaching and business model.

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There appears to be a real risk that a landmark reform, designed to meet the clear and obvious national need for mass lifelong learning, will launch with something of a whimper.

A balloon vendor braves a chilly wind from the Irish sea and no customers for the variety of balloons on 6 April 2023 in Blackpool, England. To illustrate the risk that the LLE reform will launch with something of a whimper.
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Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

In 2023, Universities UK chief executive Vivienne Stern to embrace the LLE, describing the policy as 鈥渕ore radical than I think many people realise 鈥 but the direction it sets is the right one鈥. That radicalism has since been rather watered down by Labour. The existing loan system will continue to run alongside the new one for a transition period, and most students are expected to continue studying three-year, full-time courses. In addition, stand-alone modules will only be eligible for LLE funding in specific subjects aligned with national skills needs and the industrial strategy, such as computing, engineering, physics, nursing and midwifery, economics and health and social care.

That restriction is only likely to further dampen universities鈥 enthusiasm, observers suggest.

鈥淭here are pockets of the sector that have absolutely no interest that I can [discern] in engaging with [the LLE], at least in its early [phase],鈥 said Helena Vine, lead policy officer for England at the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA). However, there are also 鈥減ockets that are really quite keen鈥.

For those already in the business of offering flexible, stand-alone courses, engaging with the LLE is a no-brainer. Similarly, institutions that already take a more modular approach to degree provision are well placed to launch courses under the LLE with relatively limited disruption. Yet even for them, the 鈥渟ize鈥 of existing modules 鈥 in terms of the number of credits they bestow 鈥 is an issue, according to Harriet Dunbar-Morris, visiting fellow at the University of Oxford鈥檚 department of continuing education. 鈥淚nstitutions that have got a whole wide range of different credit sizes are in a more difficult situation [than those with standardised modules],鈥 she said.

Moreover, revamping and standardising existing modules is unlikely to be enough to appeal to non-traditional students or working adults without radical reforms to timetables too, commentators suggest.

鈥淭he traditional 9-to-5 in-person teaching model isn鈥檛 going to work for this sort of student demographic, so if you鈥檙e not already delivering online, evening and weekend study, it鈥檚 going to be really challenging for you to quickly start delivering those things,鈥 said Kate Wicklow, director of policy and strategy at GuildHE, which represents small and specialist providers.

Nor is anyone likely to try to make such a rapid pivot, she suggests: 鈥淲ith the state of sector finances that we鈥檙e in at the moment, there isn鈥檛 a great deal of risk-taking.鈥

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The QAA鈥檚 Vine agreed. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very well known that parts of the sector are struggling financially; it takes resource and money to shift things,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd if you don鈥檛 know if you鈥檙e going to be bringing in students鈥t becomes much, much harder to justify doing so.鈥

That is particularly so given that universities will still be expected to offer wraparound support to students enrolled on LLE programmes even though they will stay for relatively short periods. 鈥淚 think it will be a brave provider that launches in September,鈥 Vine said.

Interest in the LLE from high-tariff universities founded on a boarding-school model of student life is likely to be particularly muted. After all, for the most part, these institutions have no problem attracting traditional undergraduates, each of whom guarantees their university more than 拢28,000 of income over three years. Why spend the time and money developing new courses in the hope that they may attract students who stay for less time and bring in significantly less income?

A customer at a fruit and vegetable stall, with boarded-up market stalls in the background. To illustrate that some providers such as high-tariff universities are unlikely to want to join the market for LLE.
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Jon Super/Alamy

Even for the institutions that are engaging deeply with the LLE 鈥 typically, specialist providers, those already focused on flexible learning and those with a strong widening participation mission 鈥 there remains a large question mark about student demand.

A pilot scheme launched back in 2021 saw only 17 of the planned 96 short courses go ahead聽owing to insufficient demand. And similar challenges were faced more recently by a government-run 鈥渕odular acceleration pilot鈥 鈥 intended to 鈥渁ccelerate supply and support delivery of individual modules of higher technical qualifications鈥 ahead of the LLE鈥檚 launch: seven of the 25 providers selected for the scheme failed to launch their planned modules because of a lack of interest from students. An about the initiative, published in February, said that about half of the senior sector leaders involved 鈥渆xpressed some dissatisfaction with the number of learners鈥 recruited to the programmes.

But David Phoenix, vice-chancellor of the Open University, suggests his institution鈥檚 record demonstrates that there is genuine demand for studying in a 鈥渕ore flexible way鈥 that does not lead to a full degree. The LLE, he said, is a case of 鈥渢he system catching up with the modern age鈥 and he hopes it will 鈥渄rive an environment where, over time, universities move to a more modular-based way of thinking, so that they end up creating more flexible pathways鈥.

Some institutions are exploring cross-sector models, with students able to enrol on modules from a variety of different providers in the same region or members of the same mission group. And when Dunbar-Morris鈥 Spinnaker Group, which brings together colleagues聽who lead on student experience and teaching and learning from聽across UK institutions, sent out invites to a recent meeting, 鈥渁 lot of people engaged and said they鈥檇 be interested to come and talk about this topic. People do want to consider it, even though they might be in a more traditional university.鈥 Nevertheless, it is 鈥渜uite late in the day鈥 to prepare relevant courses for September application, she conceded.

A variety of sweets in jars, with some of the shelves empty. To illustrate that LLE offers students the option to choose various modules, but there could be a limited number of providers.
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Louise Heusinkveld/Alamy (edited)

As well as uncertainty around student demand, there are also reputational risks for universities that commit most of their eggs in the LLE basket, particularly given the ongoing uncertainties about how their performance will be assessed.

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鈥淭he whole way the Office for Students currently works is to assume everyone鈥檚 a full-time undergraduate student who gets done in three years,鈥 said Diane Houston, deputy vice-chancellor for education and student experience at Birkbeck, University of London, which is a specialist in 鈥減roviding education to people who want to study part-time, to fit study around their work and their personal lives鈥.

The regulator鈥檚 current measures of institutional quality include student completion and continuation metrics, which, according to Birkbeck鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Sally Wheeler, are the reason that her institution received only a bronze rating in the most recent Teaching Excellence Framework. When the government published new guidelines last year on how the LLE would work, it said providers with a silver or gold TEF rating would go through a 鈥渟impler and quicker approval process鈥 than those without.

Accordingly, the LLE pilot programmes have been restricted to silver- and gold-rated institutions, Houston said. 鈥淲e are bronze because of our flexibility, effectively, and then we鈥檝e had to make a special application [to take part in] a pilot and make a case on a subject-by-subject basis. They basically decided that the sector can engage with the LLE pilot based on the progress of its full-time 18-year-old students, which is mad.鈥

However, there may be some relief on the horizon in this regard. The OfS has confirmed that it will not use existing student outcome measures to rate modular offerings and won鈥檛 initially introduce a student outcome measure. It is 鈥渓ikely鈥 to adopt the monitoring of a range of indicators, including growth in student numbers, withdrawal rates and the recruitment of students with no or very low entry qualifications, and it will begin to collect modular completion data from the 2027-28 academic year 鈥渢o inform the development of student outcome measures鈥, which it will develop in tandem with the sector. For the most part, existing conditions of registration and minimum quality standards will continue to apply to providers and their modules.

An OfS spokesperson said that the body wants to ensure that its approach to modular regulation 鈥渟upports institutions to deliver high-quality higher education, while continuing to safeguard public and student money. Over the coming months, we will be speaking directly with institutions who expect to offer LLE-fundable modules from January 2027.鈥

But the uncertainty about what regulation could look like in the future poses another risk for institutions. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 know if you鈥檙e going to [find yourself] on the wrong side of the regulator a few years down the line,鈥 said the QAA鈥檚 Vine.

A family on a beach, unsure whether to ride a carousel. To illustrate uncertainty about what regulation could look like in the future for LLE.
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Andy Hallam/Alamy

More generally, the sense that the policy sands around the LLE are constantly shifting is contributing to a certain exasperation even among enthusiasts.

Given all the changes and postponements that have already occurred, 鈥淚t鈥檚 been quite difficult to get to grips with what exactly is going to happen,鈥 said Dunbar-Morris. 鈥淪taff on the ground鈥ave been through quite a lot of different things over the last few years, so there鈥檚 an awful lot of fatigue in relation to having to make [further] changes.鈥

James Newby, chief executive of NMITE, says the whole 鈥渞eason for being鈥 of the engineering-focused institution that opened in Hereford in 2021 is 鈥渂uilt around modular provision. We look at our courses as a structure of stackable skills [and] there are some people who would be able to engage with engineering if it鈥檚 taught in a modular way, through an LLE-type regime, that would otherwise not be able to engage with higher education. That has to be a good thing.鈥

However, he added, the delays in rolling out policy details and the continued lack of information remain a significant barrier for institutions. 鈥淚 think provider confidence in a smooth delivery is pretty strained,鈥 Newby said.

Policy detail is slowly dripping out. Last week, for instance, that in determining an individual鈥檚 LLE eligibility, previous degree-level study will be totted up according to today鈥檚 prices, regardless of what tuition fees were actually paid 鈥 leaving those who already have a three-year degree just a year鈥檚 extra funding, except for some priority courses. But Newby said institutions would benefit from 鈥渕uch greater clarity鈥 on other issues too, such as tuition fees, course credit levels and credit transfer arrangements.

The OU is similarly waiting for some 鈥渜uite important technical information鈥, according to Phoenix. In some cases, the guidance is changing 鈥渂y the day鈥, making it difficult to give students accurate information.

Providers are also united in their view that the low public awareness must be urgently addressed. 鈥淭here needs to be some kind of national communication marketing piece that makes these qualifications legitimate,鈥 said GuildHE鈥檚 Wicklow. A national advertising campaign has been discussed by the Department for Education, but it鈥檚 unclear when or if this will happen, even as the clock ticks down towards the September opening of applications.

Any marketing campaign will have to push back against the chorus of voices claiming that the repayment conditions of student loans are unfair 鈥 and the government鈥檚 admission that despite the replacement of the high-interest Plan 2 loans several years ago, the existing student finance system remains 鈥渂roken鈥 and needs to be made fairer.

But many in the sector believe the LLE could provide an antidote to concerns about student debt. Wicklow said the LLE 鈥渄e-risks鈥 student borrowing 鈥渢o a certain extent because if you aren鈥檛 sure about whether higher education is for you, doing one module鈥s lower risk because you鈥檙e only doing a small bit [of a full degree]鈥.

The LLE 鈥渕ight actually be the positive shift that we need on鈥he student loan stuff鈥, agreed Vine. And, more generally, she believes that it is 鈥渢he right step to take. Trying to make everything much more flexible, trying to open up higher education 鈥 I think all the vision is there. It鈥檚 just鈥he kind of more boring, technical, nitty-gritty underpinning stuff鈥oesn鈥檛 feel like it鈥檚 there yet to underpin the vision.鈥

Hence, whatever the long-term success 鈥 or otherwise 鈥 of the LLE, it seems likely that its initial cohorts will be relatively small.

鈥淭his is a slow burn,鈥 reflected Wicklow. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to come to January 2027 and have hundreds of thousands of learners.鈥

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Reader's comments (1)

new
Regardless of the structural challenges of LLE, the significant beneficiaries of the flexible-learning opportunities are the learners who are needing to up-skill for the ever-changing sectors around them - whether these are 18 year olds looking ahead to 5 years time and seeing a blurry professional landscape or the 38 year old needing to refresh their AI literacy within their Health & Social Care career.... Providers with experience of PT or modular provision are well placed to understand and respond to the particular academic and student experience needs of these learners often in contrast to the hundreds of thousands teenage full-timers. All the very best to those pioneering providers.

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