New Challenges, New Chances for adult learning
New consultation launches setting out proposals that will promote high quality teaching and learning for adults and strengthen the skills system.
The consultation published today represents the next phase of the Government’s plans to implement its radical reform of adult learning and skills provision in England.
Take part in New Challenges, New Chances. The consultation will close on Friday 21 October 2011.
It sets out proposals that will:
- Promote high quality teaching and learning for adults.
- Allow colleges to respond more effectively to the needs of their local communities.
- Strengthen the skills system by securing a fairer balance of investment between learners, employers and taxpayers.
Business Secretary Vince Cable, said:
“We believe that the further education and skills sector is at the heart of our economic and educational policies.
“With better informed, more empowered learners and providers freed from petty bureaucracy, post-school adult learning will take its rightful place at the heart of our communities.”
The Consultation
The consultation covers measures to:
- Provide greater freedoms and flexibilities and further reduce the burden of bureaucracy on further education and skills providers.
- Improve the quality of teaching and learning for adults.
- Strengthen further education and skills providers’ capacity to offer training at higher education level.
- Review and improve basic literacy and numeracy provision for adults.
- Refocus Government support for informal adult and community learning.
- Introduce loans from the 2013/14 academic year providing access to advanced and higher level courses.
- Develop the further education landscape and shape of the sector.
Minister for Further Education, Skills and Lifelong Learning, John Hayes, said:
“Our proposals describe the next steps towards a more confident, vibrant further education sector, ready to meet the challenges and seize the chances that a rebalanced, high skill economy will present.
“This Government knows that skills change lives, nourish social renewal and feed economic growth.”
The proposals give more detail on how key parts of the Government’s strategy for further education and skills, published last November, will be implemented.