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Beyond school The role for FE NAHT 2014 Alison Boulton.

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Presentation on theme: "Beyond school The role for FE NAHT 2014 Alison Boulton."— Presentation transcript:

1 Beyond school The role for FE NAHT 2014 Alison Boulton

2 A brief history Pre-Warnock: some specialist colleges supporting post-war rehabilitation 1978 Warnock report notes lack of post-16 provision (10% leavers in FE) Developed through 1980s – 250 courses in 1987 (Skill survey) 1992 F&HE Act: have regard to the requirements of students with LDD

3 Inclusive Learning 1996 Tomlinson report: Inclusive Learning 130,000 students in FE colleges Not the same as integration – best match between learning environment, the student and the learning task Focus on organisation's capacity to understand and respond to individual requirements (not a deficit model)

4 Further education sector 339 colleges in England 846,000 16 -18 year olds & 2 million adults Often a ‘second chance’ Strong vocational element Responsive – meeting workforce needs

5 All change! Like all education sectors, massive changes  Funding – from September 2013  Curriculum – from September 2013  Legislative framework – from September 2014

6 Funding 1 New approach for all ‘high needs students’ – those who cost more than £6,000 to support – in 3 parts: E1, E2 & E3 Biggest challenge – Local Authorities assess, commission and fund places What do LAs actually want to commission – best or cheapest?

7 Funding 2 150 LAs x 65 specialist colleges x 220 GFEs = a lot of potentially different systems Colleges work with multiple LAs – each with their own systems and paperwork Limited guidance initially, so much confusion Time consuming and bureaucratic, and still a long way to go!

8 Study programmes New personalised curriculum framework for FE, comprising:  Main learning aim either accredited or non-accredited – links to Natspec’s Rarpa work  Work experience  English and maths - functional

9 The RARPA 5 staged process 1.Aims appropriate to an individual learner or groups of learners (clearly stated learning aims) 2.Initial assessment to establish the learner’s starting point 3.Identification of appropriately challenging learning objectives: initial, renegotiated and revised 4.Recognition and recording of progress and achievement during programme (formative assessment): teacher feedback to learners, learner reflection, progress reviews 5.End-of-programme learner self- assessment; teacher summative assessment; review of overall progress and achievement

10 Children & Families Act 2014 Part 3 Special Educational Needs 0-25 system Young people and/or parents are central Education Health & Care plans (EHCPs) replace statements and LDAs Each LA’s Local Offer describes the provision that is available

11 Code of practice Applies to colleges for first time Major revision following consultation Sets out how the system works Is the basis of appeals

12 Working together – sharing practice How can schools and colleges work together to improve opportunities for young people and ensure that provision is in their best interests?


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