Widening Participation through Employer Engagement: The role and contribution of higher education to workforce development Iain Nixon Consultant.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Developing Workforces For The 21 st Century THE CHALLENGE FOR EDUCATION Sir Howard Newby Vice-Chancellor University of the West of England.
Advertisements

Professor David Eastwood Chief Executive Higher Education Funding Council for England HEPI Conference The Higher Education Contribution to the Skills Agenda.
Professor Dave Delpy Chief Executive of Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Research Councils UK Impact Champion Competition vs. Collaboration:
HE Policy and the Skills Agenda An introduction to the regional dimension David Noyce Regional Consultant Higher Education Funding Council for England.
Dr Celia Brigg Assistant Director (Skills) The North West Higher Level Skills Pathfinder.
Employer- HE Engagement: Influence through Collaboration Helen Connor The Council for Industry and Higher Education 16 June 2009.
Learning After Leitch HEA/UUK/DfES practitioners conference April 17 th 2007 Professor Freda Tallantyre Senior Associate Higher Education Academy.
Higher Level Skills Pathfinder Project in the South West HEA UUK Conference 24th May 2007 Shamala Govindasamy.
Faculty of Health & Social Work Using Credit for Good Curriculum Design Presentation Revisit original objectives Impact of Credit on the Curriculum Who.
ESCALATE December 1 st 2008 Professional Development for Higher Education: Mapping the territory. Dr Liz Beaty, Director Strategic Academic Practice and.
1 Skills That Work for Wales A skills and employment strategy Skills, Business and Employability division Welsh Assembly Government.
Strategies for Employer Engagement
Higher Education Learning Partnerships. HELP Context - Human Capital Human capital refers to the stock of productive skills and technical knowledge embodied.
Perspectives on the Contribution of Learning to Regeneration and the role of Lifelong Learning Networks David Jenkins Director of Educational Partnerships.
Building for the Future David Sweeney 18 November, 2011.
Councillor Nick McDonald Portfolio Holder for Jobs, Skills & Business Nottingham City Council.
Employers as Learning Partners Judith Smith, Senior Adviser SRC Mini-Conference 2010: Council Chamber, All Saints, Thursday 4 th November 2010.
Academic Enterprise: Working with Business Tempus Study Visit, 1 May 2014 Laura Woods, Director of Academic Enterprise.
Towards Better Exploitation and Economic Impact: Developing the EPSRC Partnership with the University Vince Osgood Associate Director, Economic Impact.
M AXIMISED O PPORTUNITIES THROUGH V OCATIONAL E DUCATION Learning after Leitch Collaboration to Engage Employers Vocational Progression Pathways (LLNs)
Working Higher with Sector Skills Councils Dr Brian P Murphy - Research Director Cogent Sector Skills Council Limited HEA University of York 9 th March.
CoVE: Catalyst for Change David Fisher – CoVE Programme Manager LSC National Office.
Higher York: an update Presentation to University of York Council, 6 March 2009 Colin Mellors Jessica Grant (Director, Higher York)
Higher York Presentation to University of York Collaborative Provision Committee 1 June 2009 Jessica Grant (Director, Higher York)
Stephanie Clark Employer demand-led: does this mean us?
Building for the Future Teesside University – New Approaches to Workforce Development 3 November, 2011.
More Than A Vision? HE-Based Workforce Development Hugh Tollyfield – HEFCE Special Adviser on Employer Engagement South London LLN Conference.
How can a university be globally competitive and locally engaged: the Newcastle experience. John Goddard Emeritus Professor of Regional Development Studies.
What’s driving the need for flexible curricula? How are our learners changing and what are their needs/expectations for flexible curricula? QAA Enhancement.
University strategy Jan 2012 update. Our core strategies.
The Development of a Higher Level Apprenticeship in Construction Operations Management and an Integrated Foundation Degree.
End note Professor Rick Ball Centre for Economic and Social Regeneration Staffordshire University.
Hugh Tollyfield, MIoD Higher Education Funding Council for England Special Adviser, Employer Engagement Leitch Follow-up Event Friday 15 February.
Higher Level Skills in the Tees Valley Dr Ruth Helyer Dionne Lee Teesside University.
Diana Laurillard Head, e-Learning Strategy Unit Overview of e-learning: aims and priorities.
The Higher Education Innovation Fund Vinnova and British Embassy seminar 21 March 2006.
SPORT AND ACTIVE LEISURE BUCS CONFERENCE National Skills Academy & SkillsActive.
Higher Education and the Workplace - supporting employer engagement in engineering and physical science David Hellier Head of Sector Engagement.
Jane Hanstock Pro Vice Chancellor, University of Salford The HE Response.
Cheshire and Warrington Lifelong Learning Network AND Leading Employer Engagement Project (LEEP) Selina Green – Director LLN/Employer Engagement 19 th.
Creating Entrepreneurship: entrepreneurship education for the creative industries David Clews Subject Centre Manager Higher Education Academy Art | Design.
Lifelong Learning Networks, South London and Employer Engagement Mary Stuart Professor of Higher Education Deputy Vice Chancellor, Kingston University.
Crisis Conference 2011 Crisis Conference 2011 Session 2: Removing the barriers to skills training.
STRATEGIC DIRECTION UPDATE JANUARY THE VISION AND MISSION THE VISION: ENRICHING LIVES AND CREATING SUCCESSFUL FUTURES. THE MISSION: EDUCATION EXCELLENCE.
The University in its Place: the social and cultural impact of universities John Brennan Centre for Higher Education Research and Information, the Open.
Keith Burnley, Executive Director, NWUA Maximising the Opportunities and Benefits of closer collaboration between Business and Higher Education.
Skills for Growth The national skills strategy November 2009 Philip Britton LSC.
The changing nature of psychology education in the UK Annie Trapp, Director, Higher Education Academy Psychology Network
STRATEGIC INNOVATION FUND PROJECT: Ireland Education in Employment and Roadmap for Employer- Academic Partnership.
Regional Perspective South East of England 2007 For comment.
To what degree do programme teams engage with employers to shape design and delivery that will allow customisation to individual employer/learner contexts.
Sir Howard Newby Chief Executive Higher Education Funding Council for England SHEEO Conference 13 August 2004 Regulation, Planning and the Market in Pursuing.
Recognition of Prior Learning for Individuals and Organisations Andy Gibbs October 2013.
ICTL Malaysia 2007 Embedding Excellence in Learning and Teaching Professor Geoff Layer University of Bradford, UK
Ann Jones Director: Regional Working Learning and Skills Council LSC/RSPs and the Impact on Delivery 23 June 2005.
Future Directions Celia Hunt Head of Strategy, Learning and Funding.
HEFCE eLearning Strategy Dr Liz Beaty Director (Learning and Teaching) HEFCE.
Widening participation to HE Linking London conference 2 nd July 2012 Victoria Waite Senior Policy Adviser – London and East
The Higher Education Academy’s Education for Sustainable Development Programme The Sustainability of Sustainability: Developing the Leaders of Tomorrow.
VNIL: theory, history and practice Jon Talbot University of Chester, England.
The Role of Policy – can regional policy really make a difference?
LLNs and Higher Level Skills: A Northwest Perspective Dr Lis Smith, NWDA.
Tertiary Education Agenda New Zealand July Key domestic issues Equity in achievement Demographic patterns Affordability for government Tight labour.
UNIVERSITY CHALLENGE Dr Lis Smith Director of Skills, NWDA.
Sustainable Development – the role of higher education EAUC conference 31 March 2008 Steve Egan.
Enhancing Graduate Employability: Skills agenda going forward Brooke Storer-Church 26 May 2016.
Introduction to The UK VET System Gail Campbell Head of VET Global.
Research Councils UK and the research funding landscape Name Job title Research Councils UK.
Workforce Development with Oxford Brookes University Delivering university accredited staff development and training for employers and employees Steve.
Department for the Economy Deputy Director, Further Education
Presentation transcript:

Widening Participation through Employer Engagement: The role and contribution of higher education to workforce development Iain Nixon Consultant

Focus What is driving the employer engagement and workforce development agenda in HE? What is happening in practice? What are the key issues and challenges in delivering on this agenda? What needs to be considered in moving forward?

Workforce development Learning which accredits or extends the workplace skills and abilities of employees –Provision delivered by HE (incl. HE in FE) Level 4 and above –Fds –UG and PG programmes –Short courses (accredited/non-accredited) –Provision part of the HE sector’s initial/continuing professional development offer

Typology of workforce development Investing in learning to improve personal performance in securing new work Investing in learning to improve personal and professional performance in existing work/ organisation Investing in learning to improve the organisation’s performance and competitiveness Investing in learning to bring knowledge and skills into the organisation Formal relationship (employed) Informal relationship (not employed) Organisation driven Individual driven

Provider identifies needsEmployers and learners identify needs Develops generic knowledge and skills Develops technical knowledge and skills Creates new knowledgeTransfers existing knowledge Work focusedWork relevant Fixed schedule of deliveryFlexible schedule of delivery Learning in the work placeLearning away from the work place Support is programme centredSupport is learner centred Learner support provided by providerLearner support is provided by the employer Wholly recognised by professional body No element recognised by professional body Assessment focuses on knowledgeAssessment focuses on skills Provider undertakes assessmentEmployer and/or learner undertakes assessment Wholly accredited by providerNo element accredited Evaluate quality of learning experience Evaluate impact on learner development and organisation

What is driving the workforce development agenda in HE?

Our Futures Raising UK productivity and competitiveness to create a sustainable economy by 2020

Rapid demographic change –There will be a ‘greying’ workforce who are least likely to train –The number of year olds will have decreased significantly Global economic integration –China and India will be much more important than the UK Pressure on resources and global climate –US and EU (10% of world population, 38% of CO2 emissions) Global uncertainty –“Poverty, environmental degradation & despair are destroyers of people, societies, nations…” (Powell) The 2020 test

Increasing the number of employees attaining higher level skills –40% of the working age population qualified to Level 4 –66% growth over period Encouraging higher value added activity in businesses –Create and apply new knowledge in the workplace Enabling innovation, enterprise and creativity –Technological changes, market responses

The 2020 test The HE system will be much larger and diversity in providers and their missions will prevail Provision in HE and how it is funded will have changed dramatically –Reduced reliance on public funding –Greater levels of employer contributions There will be a broader social mix of people studying HE, many of whom are (already) in work

Strategic drivers Leitch Review of Skills –Rapid demographic change, global economic integration –High skills workforce, demand-led provision HEFCE Employer Engagement Strategy –Funded initiatives LLNs, HLS pathfinders, employer engagement pilots, FL pathfinders Focus on work-based learning, enterprise and employability Grant letter to HEFCE (2007) –Employer engagement Growth strategy, at least 5,000 additional entrants year on year Employer demand-led funding Close working with LSC

What is happening in practice?

National dimension £285m from non-credit bearing CPD activity 2% of employer market Extensive part-time provision (UG and PG) Short bespoke courses: On campus (88% of HEIs) At company premises (80% of HEIs) Distance learning for business (66% of HEIs) HE-BCIS Survey (July 2006)

Regional and sectoral dimension Regional dimension RSPs and RSAPs emphasise higher level skills Increased involvement of RDAs in agreeing funding priorities, e.g. HEIF LLNs focusing on vocational pathways and progression HLSPs operating in three regions (NE, NW and SW) Sectoral dimension SSCs are establishing Skills Agreements –Skills Academies

What are the key issues and challenges?

In true Family Fortunes style we asked the DfES, HEFCE, SSDA, employers, academics and learners what the ‘critical issues of today’ were for HEIs in supporting workforce development. Our survey said…

X OUR SURVEY SAID… Overcoming the language barrier Raising demand or expanding provision Encouraging good pedagogic practice Engaging effectively with employers Transforming accreditation and quality assurance Meeting the costs of design and delivery

What needs to be considered?

Teaching Research Academic Societal Widening participation/access Sector skills Graduate employability Higher Education targets Professional Qualifications Lifelong learning Workforce development Foundation degrees Economic growth Business competitiveness Knowledge transfer IP exploitation/spinout companies Regional development and regeneration Graduates Postgraduates Higher Education targets Learning programmes Intellectual capital Academic research International research base Discipline advancement New knowledge World class knowledge base Dr M. Wedgwood, Manchester Metropolitan University Institutional trajectories

Work of the Academy Policy development –Working with DfES, HEFCE, QAA etc. Shaping institutional strategic intent –Facilitating a PVCs and pedagogic special interest group –Supporting the HLSPs Supporting Subject Centres –Funding six development projects involving SSCs and HEIs Engaging in more research –Facilitating a researchers community of practice –Co-ordinate and fund a programme of research

References Work-based learning: illuminating the higher education landscape Higher Education Academy Workplace learning in the North East Higher Education Funding Council for England