Legislation aimed at paving the way for the Westminster government to deliver its planned lifelong loan entitlement from 2025 has been introduced to Parliament 鈥 but more controversial plans to restrict student enrolment are conspicuously absent.
The Lifelong Learning (糖心Vlog Fee Limits) Bill, which had its first reading on 1聽February, seeks to tweak the student finance system to ensure that those taking individual modules at higher education providers are charged proportionately to those taking a full degree course.
It was previously thought that such a bill could also include a minimum entry requirement (MER) for individuals to be eligible for student loans, as well as student number controls (SNCs) 鈥 two policies that the government has committed to in the past.
But sector sources told 糖心Vlog last month that ministers were instead seeking 鈥渦ncontroversial鈥 legislation, which has proven to be the case. THE has asked the Department for Education whether MER and SNCs are still part of the government鈥檚 long-term plans.
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If enacted, the new bill would introduce a method that places limits on the fees a provider can charge for a single course or module and allow the secretary of state to set maximum chargeable credits per course year.
Robert Halfon, the minister for skills, apprenticeships and higher education, said it would be 鈥渢ransformational in helping students to climb the education and skills ladder and get the qualifications they need鈥.
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The government said the bill was needed because of fears that the current system 鈥 which only sets limits on how much universities or colleges can charge a student in an academic year 鈥 disincentivises flexible learning, as someone wishing to take only one module could be charged the same as a full year鈥檚 study.
The long-promised LLE will provide adults with funding equivalent to four years of post-18 study (currently worth 拢37,000), which can be used over their whole working lives.
Mr Halfon said it would prevent students being 鈥渃onfined to just traditional full degree courses鈥 and instead 鈥渁llow them to build up credits to get both the qualification and training they need for jobs鈥.
Former prime minister Boris Johnson鈥檚 previous administration had committed to ensuring that the LLE was up and running by 2025, and sector leaders had feared that the policy would be delayed or scrapped altogether in the political chaos of recent months.
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Signs of movement in this area were therefore broadly welcomed by the sector, although many questions remained over how it would work in practice.
Arti Saraswat, HE senior policy manager for the Association of Colleges, said the bill was an 鈥渋mportant first step in making student finance more flexible鈥.
But, she said, implementing it by 2025 remains 鈥渃hallenging鈥 and 鈥渢here is still work needed to explain who will be eligible for the lifelong learning entitlement, where they will be able to use it and how those institutions will be regulated.鈥
The drop in part-time provision at colleges and universities presented a 鈥済enuine challenge in rebuilding capacity鈥, Dr Saraswat said, adding that while the LLE and credit-based student loans were 鈥渋mportant technical fixes鈥 they were 鈥渘ot enough on their own鈥.
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Jonathan Michie, chair of the Universities Association for Lifelong Learning, said the bill would not 鈥渄o anything to reverse the damage that has been done to the provision of adult education and lifelong learning over the past wasted decade and a half of austerity鈥.
鈥淔unding needs to be provided to enable providers to design and deliver high-quality courses at affordable fees,鈥 he said.
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