A “tick-box” culture at many UK employers means health and safety training is prioritised over productivity-boosting skills, a report has found.
An analysis of labour market data and international surveys by the Learning and Work Institute (L&W) revealed nearly one in five workers reported security or health and safety was the main focus of their training.
In contrast, training in skills such as advanced digital skills or project management has fallen behind many other developed countries.
More than half of training in the UK is also short (58 per cent) – lasting for a day or less – which was the highest proportion for a country in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 2023 adult skills survey. The international average was 44 per cent.
‘Tick-box training’
L&W chief executive Stephen Evans said: “We’ve got more of a focus on this really short, often induction, security, health and safety stuff, which is what we’re getting at when we say tick-box training, or a culture of compliance.
“Some of it you need, but it shouldn’t be the sum total, and the more developmental stuff has really dropped off quite a lot over the last couple of decades.”
The data shows that 19 per cent of employees reported security and health and safety as their main focus of training, which is “mid-level” compared to countries such as Switzerland (9 per cent) and Italy (33 per cent).
Meanwhile, 6 per cent of UK employees received project management or organisational skills training, which trailed the US (8 per cent), Singapore (10 per cent) and Japan (13 per cent).
L&W warned that while compliance training is “necessary”, failing to invest in transferable skills means the economy will struggle to build capabilities for “future productivity growth”.
Employer training investment falling
Employer investment in training has also “substantially declined” in recent years, with a 29 per cent drop since 2011.
Countries such as Germany or South Korea have increased their investment in developmental training, while the UK has a “lower skills base”, Evans said.
He told FE Week the UK risks falling even further behind because of its “low and skewed” investment.
The think-tank CEO added that the apprenticeship levy was originally “intended to be the minimum” training budget for employers, but has ended up becoming the maximum.
A decision to slim down “bloated” T Levels is a “necessary” move – but shaving classroom hours alone will not be enough to boost take-up, experts have warned.
The Department for Education this week announced it would cut the size of new T Levels to 1,080 classroom hours, down from the current minimum of 1,180 hours, while also continuing efforts to shrink existing courses.
The move follows complaints from colleges that the flagship technical qualifications are too big and difficult to deliver at scale.
But while sector figures say the change should help make T Levels more accessible, many doubt it will be the silver bullet ministers hope for.
Ministers have also been warned the move risks leaving English students with even less teaching time than their peers in other countries that are international leaders in technical education.
‘Painfully bloated’
Robbie Maris, a researcher at the Education Policy Institute (EPI), said reducing hours was a “positive and necessary step” after receiving “consistent feedback from colleges, students and stakeholders that the volume of content has simply been too high – reaching up to 2,000 guided learning hours on top of a sizeable industry placement”.
This has “likely contributed” to relatively high drop-out rates – more than a quarter of students who started the fourth wave of T Levels and should have picked up their results last summer left their course early.
Maris said cutting classroom hours would bring T Levels closer to the three A Level benchmark they intended to equal, adding that this recalibration ensured the qualification remained a “substantial programme that develops high-level technical skills, while finally being proportionate and manageable for students to study and for colleges to deliver”.
The National Audit Office warned last year that T Levels may struggle to scale after student number forecasts were missed by three quarters in 2024-25, compared to original predictions.
Abysmal starts have led to a near-£700 million spending shortfall from T Levels’ launch in 2020 up to 2025.
Latest starts data for 2025-26, published on Tuesday, showed the DfE even missed its revised recruitment target for the academic year by almost a fifth.
Catherine Sezen, director of education policy at the Association of Colleges, backed the classroom hours reduction.
But to make T Levels “truly accessible” the DfE must “go beyond size and look at content, assessment and the nature of the industry placement”, she added.
Claire Green, post-16 and skills specialist at the Association of School and College Leaders, warned reducing hours without adjusting curriculum content or assessment load “will not ease pressures on providers and may ultimately jeopardise student achievement”.
She added that “persistent barriers such as limited availability of industry placements, demanding assessment requirements, and the high English and maths expectations continue to restrict colleges’ ability to deliver these programmes at scale”.
Claire Green
The DfE committed this week to making “further changes” to assessment and industry placements to support growth. New industry placement guidance will be published by June.
The minimum 315-hour industry placement, which is undertaken in addition to classroom hours, will remain. But officials signalled further watering down of the mandatory requirement, including enhancing current placement flexibilities such as conducting them across multiple employers, group projects or remote working.
Regulator Ofqual will also remove content “not absolutely necessary to demonstrate threshold competence” and cut the assessment burden, particularly the staff time required to administer exams.
Meaningful reform or cost-saving measure?
Currently, the smallest T Levels require a minimum of 1,180 classroom hours per learner over two years and attract £11,154 funding. The largest require a minimum of 1,730 hours and are funded at £15,430.
These funding rates are set to be reduced in 2026-27, and the hours cap for new T Levels suggests funding levels could fall further.
Green said cutting classroom hours “appears less like meaningful reform and more like a cost‑saving measure” – one that “risks leaving students worse off than their peers in other OECD countries, who already benefit from greater teaching time”.
Her concerns echo previous research from the EPI, which found T Levels were already relatively narrow and short compared with technical programmes in high-performing countries.
Vocational routes in systems in Germany, Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands typically include classroom-based technical provision of around 1,000 supervised learning hours per year.
Mix-and-match opportunity missed
Tom Richmond, an education policy analyst and former adviser to education ministers, said the government should have gone further and made T Levels a size that allowed them to be studied alongside A Levels – which is the plan for newly proposed V Levels (see page 7).
He told FE Week: “I’m glad the DfE has recognised the painfully bloated nature of T Levels, although these changes fall well short of allowing students to study them alongside an A Level, despite some T Level students being denied university places due to the lack of A Level maths, for example.
“It’s bizarre watching the DfE highlight the importance of allowing students to combine the new V Levels with A Levels, only to completely ignore the same principle for T Levels. I also doubt many schools and colleges will be persuaded to suddenly offer more T Levels just because a few hours have been shaved off the curriculum.”
Skills minister Jacqui Smith described the government’s “phased transition” to new qualifications as giving “the certainty providers need, while ensuring that no young person falls through the cracks”. By pausing the defunding of applied general qualifications and setting out a carefully paced programme to introduce the new V Levels, she has certainly achieved her first goal.
But it’s unclear how the reforms will achieve her second goal of providing a much stronger education and skills platform for young people, because the proposed remedy doesn’t address the problem’s root cause. Poorly designed qualifications aren’t the problem; the real culprit is the chronically unbalanced design of our education delivery system.
The phantom menace
Since the Sainsbury review of technical education in 2016, the DfE have been pursuing the phantom menace of an over-complicated qualification system by pushing through a relentless campaign of simplification. The sheer number of vocational qualifications we’ve been told causes confusion amongst students, parents and employers, and makes technical education difficult to navigate. This is simply nonsense. Yes, there may be 872 level 3 qualifications eligible for funding. But most of them are niche subjects. And in reality most FE colleges offer 20-30 vocational subjects, which are clear in their content, goals and progression pathways.
The quality of applied general qualifications has improved greatly over time, they have gained wide acceptance from universities as valid HE entry qualifications, and the number enrolled on them has increased by nearly 70 per cent over the past decade. They are not the cause of the rise in NEETs or of the country’s continuing skills gaps.
Over the past ten years there has been a welcome change in the balance between academic and vocational courses. But it’s difficult to be precise because a significant number of students take a mix of both. In 2015, just under 338,000 students took A Levels; in 2025 it was 313,000. In 2015 around 200,000 vocational qualifications were awarded; in 2025 it’s close to 252,000.
Painful progress
Meanwhile, the DfE’s flagship vocational qualification – T levels – has made painfully slow progress, reaching less than 3 per cent of total level 3 enrolments this year. It’s a far cry from the 100,000 a year predicted in 2021, or the stated intention when the programme was launched that T levels would become the main technical route for 16-19 year olds. Despite continued efforts to improve uptake, retention and results, there’s no sign of T Levels ever becoming more than a niche qualification for a minority of young people. We can only hope that the historic success of applied generals will provide a firmer launchpad for V Levels to take off from.
No qualification reform can address the continued failure of our education system to produce enough technically qualified workers to meet the needs of British industry. In 2015, there were 12,035 vocational qualifications awarded in engineering and manufacturing – representing 9 per cent of the total. In 2025 the equivalent figure was 9,300. An ageing workforce isn’t being replaced by younger entrants. More than a third of technical roles linked to key industrial sectors face chronic and worsening skills shortages.
Pipeline blockage
The blockage in our skills pipeline is our education delivery system. Virtually no schools offer any teaching of technical skills, other than in the practical elements of science subjects. Of those taking T Levels, 72 per cent attend college, and the great majority of those at school are studying education and early years, or business and administration. Imagine being 16, trying to find an engineering course near you. In Huddersfield, 82 per cent of technical courses are delivered by the two FE colleges. Only one (Kirklees) offers engineering. In Reading, only six of eleven state schools offer any applied generals. And only the UTC, sponsored by Activate Learning, offers engineering.
Introducing V Levels – or any other qualification reform – is not going to close technical education gaps that exist across the country. What’s needed is a radical reform of the secondary school curriculum, going much further than the Francis review’s recommendations, to reintroduce a technical skills element. And the pattern of 16-19 provision in each local authority needs reconfiguring to ensure that good quality technical and vocational courses are far more readily available, so every aspiring engineer or technician has local access to an attractive training pathway. This is the only way to close the cracks that Smith is rightly concerned about.
Expectations that awarding bodies have a “proven” track record of delivering comparable qualifications mean that “relatively few” are likely to secure recognition, officials said.
Ofqual said awarding bodies must have existing “high levels of capacity, capability and governance” to ensure safe delivery.
It will draw on the standards that it expects from A Level and T Level awarding organisations, in line with the government’s aim for V Levels to have “parity of esteem” with them.
The consultation added: “As a consequence, we anticipate that few organisations will secure recognition in the first phase, because only a small number of awarding organisations currently award qualifications which require those attributes.”
Second consultation coming soon
Ofqual intends to run a separate consultation later this year on new ‘qualification level conditions’ that will set a long-term “level playing field” on assessment approaches, how standards are set, and requirements for review and appeal.
The regulator has similar qualification-specific conditions for awarding organisations delivering GCSEs and A Levels.
It expects to have these conditions in place in time for the new qualifications to be available for teaching of the first tranche of subjects in September 2027.
But awarding organisations that gain recognition for the first tranche will have to re-apply for recognition for the second batch.
Asking awarding organisations to undertake two recognition processes in a row could be a “major increase” in cost, but will result in the commercial benefit of a “more trusted and robust qualification ‘brand’”, according to the regulator’s impact assessment.
Students will also benefit from “increased trust in qualification quality” when progressing into work or further training.
Rushed circumstances
The DfE announced this week that V Levels will be taught in digital, education and early years, and finance and accounting from September 2027.
Eight further V Levels are planned from 2028, with the final batch rolling out in 2030. By then, there will be 18 V Levels available in subjects including care services, hair and beauty, sport, engineering and performing arts.
Rob Nitsch, chief executive of the Federation of Awarding Bodies, has raised concerns about the rushed timeline and pointed out that Ofqual has had to forego the normal 12-week consultation period deployed by government bodies and are “having to apply criteria from other qualifications”.
“This is a manifestation of the time pressure and risk that is being introduced to this change programme by the decision to have first teach in 2027 – and there will be more,” he told FE Week.
Ofqual said its approach of recognising awarding organisations for delivery of subjects due to be launched in 2027 before it has set qualifications level conditions “reflects the unique circumstances” of the timeline.
With previous complex new qualifications, the regulator said it already had qualification level conditions in place before recognising awarding organisations.
Officials also think introducing this round of new qualifications is “a more complex endeavour” than previous reform programmes because similar qualifications already existed.
T Levels were also introduced after a round of competitive tendering, the consultation added.
Proposed requirements
Conditions proposed by Ofqual include the awarding organisation having pre-existing recognition for other regulated qualifications, and demonstrated expertise and experience delivering large numbers of qualifications on a national scale.
They also include having the appropriate systems in place, such as governance, quality assurance qual, printing, data sharing, and cyber security.
The criteria for recognition consultation launched today is aimed at awarding organisations as well as schools, colleges, employers and their representative bodies.
School and college staff need continuous specialist training to “better understand and respond to the needs of children in care”, Ofsted has said.
Research by the watchdog found issues that “often disrupted continuity” and were “barriers to progress” for children in care.
Inspectors found “inconsistencies in local authority processes, high staff turnover and limited availability of external agencies”.
College learners “faced additional challenges, such as combining studies with parenting responsibilities, or coping with last-minute timetable changes”.
They often felt “less supported than their peers who attended school”.
‘Inconsistent’ training
Ofsted’s research was based on focus groups and surveys of inspectors and virtual school heads – leaders who sit within local authorities with a statutory responsibility for the education of children in care.
Inspectors also carried out 15 research visits, 10 to schools, four to general FE colleges and one to a sixth form college.
The research found support for children was most effective when staff were well trained.
“Leaders who invested in specialist professional development, particularly in understanding the needs of care-experienced children and the impact that issues such as trauma can have on children in care, were better equipped to create supportive environments.”
But staff access to high-quality training was “inconsistent, especially in college settings.
“Staff showed a keen interest in having more targeted, practical training. To improve outcomes for children in care, it is essential that all staff, regardless of role or setting, receive access to relevant and sustained professional development.”
‘Lottery’ effect
Some schools and colleges visited for the research reported that access to resources and virtual school provision “often depended on which local authority a child was placed under, creating a ‘lottery’ effect”.
“Further education providers highlighted that PEP meetings were sometimes not held beyond age 16, reducing oversight and support for older learners.
“These inconsistencies limited timely interventions and contributed to delays in support for children in care.”
Despite the difficulties, “the leaders of most of the schools and colleges visited demonstrated a deep understanding of each learner’s circumstances”.
The report recommended “ongoing specialist training for school and college staff, to better understand and respond to the needs of children in care”.
“Training should be continuous rather than one-off, with regular refresher sessions.”
Boost collaboration
It also called for a standardised national approach to PEP formats, funding approvals and virtual school provision.
Collaboration between schools, colleges and councils should be improved through “shared protocols and expectations”.
Councils should “ensure ongoing support for care-experienced young people beyond 16, including effective PEPs”.
The report also said colleges needed extra support for “mentoring, emotional support and academic help, alongside early transition planning with clear routes into education, employment or training”.
Martyn Oliver
Chief inspector Martyn Oliver said the report highlighted “the fantastic work some schools and colleges are doing to support these children’s progress”.
But it is “also clear that we need a more consistent national approach to local authority support and practice.
“Understanding how leaders meet the needs of vulnerable children is my top priority, and a golden thread running through all our education inspections under the renewed framework.
“I hope this report’s findings help leaders and decision-makers understand how children in care are best supported in their education, so that no child falls through the gaps.”
Further education teachers now earn nearly £10,500 less than school teachers – the widest pay gap in at least 15 years, new research has found.
New findings from the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) today reveal teaching staff in FE providers earn on average 27 per cent less than their peers in secondary schools.
The disparity has widened sharply in recent years, with researchers warning that sustained funding increases will be needed if colleges are to close the gap and recruit enough teachers.
While average UK earnings have grown by 4 per cent since 2010, FE teacher pay has dropped 18 per cent in real terms over the same period.
In 2010, the median FE teacher salary was £32,645, compared with £36,756 for secondary school teachers — a gap of about 12.6 per cent.
The difference narrowed slightly during the 2010s but began widening again from 2020-21.
By 2024-25, the median FE teacher salary stood at £39,355, compared with £49,789 for secondary school teachers, leaving a pay gap of almost £10,500.
The report said: “School teachers’ pay has also dropped in relative terms, but the drop for FE teachers has been far larger. This data reinforces the impression that FE teacher pay is now far less competitive than it was in the recent past.”
Funding pressures
Recent analysis from the Institute for Fiscal Studies revealed per student funding for 16 to 18-year-olds, the main income source for many colleges, has declined by 8 per cent in real terms over the last 15 years.
NFER researchers said this reinforces its conclusion that the 27 per cent gap in FE teacher pay is largely driven by colleges and other providers’ inability to afford higher pay.
The Department for Education further stung leaders this week after it announced a 0.5 per cent rise to the 16 to 19 funding base rate this week despite promising real-terms increases in the recent skills white paper, prompting warnings that this measly cash boost to college finances will leave “very little” for staff pay rises.
NFER called for a “sustained” effort over several years to sufficiently fund colleges to pay teachers more.
School teacher salaries are nationally binding and set through a recommendation by the School Teachers’ Review Body, which is then approved by the secretary of state.
In contrast, colleges are responsible for setting staff pay themselves.
‘Totally unacceptable’
David Hughes, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said college leaders’ hands are tied without a headline pay increase for FE staff.
“The increasing pay gap between school and FE teachers is totally unacceptable,” he said.
“It is also grossly unfair to thousands of college staff who are not being paid what they deserve. It is no wonder that the unions are able to secure wins in ballots for industrial action, with pay below where it should be.”
UCU general secretary Jo Grady said the pay gap between school and college teachers is a “scandal that has blighted the sector for years”.
She added: “Our members took strike action at colleges across England earlier this year in defence of their pay and working conditions and college employers must do more to ensure staff are paid properly.
“If the government is as committed to improving the skills of the nation as it says, then it must put its money where its mouth is, increase funding for further education and ensure staff pay is prioritised.”
Boosting teacher numbers
The analysis, funded by the Nuffield Foundation, also found the number of teachers in general FE colleges and sixth form colleges has stabilised in the last three years, following a decade of decline.
Latest data from 2023-24 showed there were around 80,000 FE teachers working in England
The report also cited 3,000 vacant FE teaching posts in 2023-24, with very high vacancy rates in key subject areas like the construction and engineering sectors, which reached one in 10 unfilled posts in some regions.
NFER education workforce lead Jack Worth said: “We know that FE teachers in these subjects are set to play a critical role in supporting the government to meet its economic growth ambitions.”
Hughes added: “The disparity between school, and indeed industry salaries, has serious consequences for recruitment and retention, particularly in high-priority areas like construction, engineering, and health, which then means key courses can’t run.”
The demographic bulge of an estimated 20,000 more 16 to 18-year-old students in colleges this academic year further exacerbates the FE teacher shortage.
NFER pointed out that the number of 16- to 18-year-olds in England is projected to increase by 7 per cent between 2023 and 2027.
Researchers said that FE providers will “almost certainly” have to recruit significantly more teachers and to continue doing so for the next few years, adding that a 7 per cent increase in the teaching workforce equates to 2,700 more teachers – nearly half of the government’s 6,500 teacher recruitment target.
Workload and morale
The study also looked at working conditions for FE teachers.
Full-time FE teachers worked an average of 39 hours per week, compared to 41 hours among similar workers in 2024-25.
However, FE teachers were more likely to report working overtime, often without additional pay.
Combined with relatively low salaries, researchers said this could contribute to dissatisfaction and retention problems.
The report also found FE teachers reported less influence over workplace decisions than comparable workers and were associated with lower levels of happiness at work.
NFER suggested colleges could help improve retention by meaningfully involving staff in organisational decision-making.
The report also recommended ministers continue targeting financial incentives in shortage subjects, pointing to evidence from school teacher bursaries and retention payments showing they can be cost-effective.
Funding for college students’ free meals will be frozen next year, while schools will see a 5p boost.
In an update today, the Department for Education said the current £2.61 per student FE free meal rate will remain the same in the 2026-27 academic year “as a minimum”.
In contrast, the per-meal funding rate for school children will increase by 5p to £2.66 in September.
The news, which follows revelations of a below-inflation 0.5 per cent increase to the 16 to 19 funding base rate, has been described as “frustrating” and “insulting”.
Darren Hankey, principal at Hartlepool College of Further Education, said: “As someone who was in receipt of and benefited from free-school meals through primary and secondary education; I find this decision deeply disappointing.
“Once again, post-16 students miss out as colleges up and down the country work tirelessly to support many students from some of the least-resourced backgrounds.
“To offer £2.61 a day, a real terms cut, to help try and feed an older teenager is quite insulting and the government’s key mission of breaking down barriers to opportunity rings hollow.”
Qasim Hussain, vice president (further education) at the National Union of Students, added: “The decision is particularly frustrating following yesterday’s wider 16 to 19 funding announcements, which were already a significant disappointment for the sector.
“Free college meals are a vital support for disadvantaged students in FE, and freezing the rate while costs remain high will make provision increasingly challenging for colleges.”
In its update, the DfE said the rate will remain at £2.61 as a minimum “to support planning” but added that funding is kept under review.
Operational guidance will be issued “in due course”, the department added.
It is unclear why the DfE has chosen to increase meals funding for schools but frozen the rate for FE settings.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: “Through our Plan for Change, this government has taken a historic step to tackle the stain of child poverty – offering free school meals to every single child from a household that claims Universal Credit.
“The new entitlement will see over half a million more children able to benefit from a free meal from next school year and lift 100,000 children out of poverty.
“The significant expansion of free meals to an additional 500,000 children is fully funded, backed by £1 billion.”
How the dinner tables have turned
Colleges, independent training providers and sixth-form colleges have had access to free meals in FE funding for disadvantaged students aged between 16 and 19 since it was extended from schools to FE in 2014-15.
The 2026-27 rate freeze will be the first year since at least 2020-21 that FE providers have received a lower per-meal rate than schools.
The FE per meal rate was frozen at £2.41 between 2014-15 and 2022-23. The schools rate was set at £2.34 before being matched with FE at £2.41 in 2022-23 and rose at the same rate until this year, when it reached £2.61.
Diana Martin, CEO of Dudley College of Technology, said the DfE’s announcement on a free meals freeze for next year “is disappointing, given that the degree of disadvantage a learner has does not change when they reach 16”.
Hussain added: “At a time when the cost-of-living crisis continues to affect many families, and some students are struggling to afford food during the college day, this is not the direction we should be taking, even recognising the current fiscal constraints.”
Universal credit expansion
About one quarter of school pupils, 2.2 million, received free school meals in 2024-25.
In the same year, about 90,000 low-income students in 377 FE settings benefitted from free meals allocations, at a cost of £37 million.
But these figures are likely to rise next academic year as free meal eligibility is widened from students or families with an income below £7,400 to anyone from a household receiving universal credit.
This will give 500,000 more pupils and students access to the scheme for the first time, the DfE estimates.
Kerry Boffey helps FE providers navigate Ofsted inspections as boss of FIN – and she tells Jessica Hill the new inspection framework isn’t a reason to drop your guard
Kerry Boffey woke up every inspection morning with stomach ache during her 18 years as an inspector of independent training providers.
She believes every Ofsted inspector should wake with that sort of tension as it reflects an intense passion to “get the grade right because it matters”.
“If I ever didn’t have tummy ache in the morning, it would mean I didn’t care enough,” she says.
Nowadays, Boffey carries the same determination into helping others achieve successful inspection outcomes as chief executive of the Fellowship of Inspection Nominees (FIN).
And though Ofsted has launched a new inspection framework in the wake of headteacher Ruth Perry’s death in 2023, she points out that many of its inspectors are the same people as before, deploying the same methods for scrutinising evidence.
“They’re more polite about it now, and so they should be, but the fundamental aspects of triangulation of evidence haven’t changed,” she says.
Boffey’s team have been analysing the latest inspection feedback to help nominees get their houses in order under the new regime.
Ofsted inspectors (HMI) have played down the need for more inspection preparation, with one telling nominees at this year’s Apprenticeships and Training Conference that “you don’t need to produce reams and reams of documents, we just want you to talk to us”, and that “there are lots of things people think they’re supposed to do for inspection that they really don’t”.
But Boffey warns it would be “naïve” for nominees to believe Ofsted’s “smoke and mirrors” rhetoric. “It’s really unfair to some providers who then go into inspection unprepared. That sets people up to fail. You need to be more realistic.”
She asserts that Ofsted’s new inclusion drive cannot be achieved unless inspectors ask “difficult questions” to get the evidence they need to show that disadvantaged learners are being supported.
Rural roots
FIN’s 600 members usually encounter Boffey via a screen from her farmhouse home, where her scruffy Jack Russell, plus a labrador and collie that belong to her daughters, sit just out of view.
“Anyone on a Zoom call with me often hears a dog who’s seen a squirrel through the office window – when all three see a squirrel, I’ve got no chance!” she jokes.
Boffey is a farm girl through and through. She was born and raised on a farm and married a farmer. Three years ago, her husband suffered a stroke, so her two daughters are often close by to lend a hand.
Boffey disliked school and recalls a careers officer in a tweed jacket with patches on his arms and an egg stain on his lapel, telling her she wasn’t “bright enough to work in an office”.
But at 16, she thrived on a work placement with a retailer, and thus began her deep appreciation for vocational training.
After she later trained as a dispensing optician, she found her “spiritual home in further education” as a retail and warehousing tutor for an ITP. She also became an external verifier for City & Guilds in Northern Ireland, and managed her own team in the West Midlands.
Kerry Boffey, FIN CEO
Inspector Boffey
In 1999, Boffey became an associate inspector for the Training Standards Council (TSC), and then for the Adult Learning Inspectorate which replaced it and subsequently became part of Ofsted.
She quickly learned just how pedantic inspectors can be. One remarked without irony how an organisation had 22 policies, but lacked “a policy to review the policies”.
Despite the tummy aches, she came to love the “total immersion of a week getting to know a provider” that inspections gave her.
She was “taken aback” by some of the “absolutely bespoke support” she saw. One tutor drove a homeless learner to court for a hearing, which was “not what they’re paid to do” and their actions proved to be a “game changer”.
Boffey started a consultancy in 2003, the Adult Learning Improvement Network (ALIN), providing services such as coaching, quality improvement and management development programmes for providers. She still runs ALIN today as a vehicle for governance work and quality reviews.
‘Don’t moan – get stuck in’
She noticed through ALIN that many inspection nominees were “struggling to drive quality”, as they were “a lone voice that could not be heard above the drive for business growth until the threat of inspection drew close”.
Boffey’s life mantra is that “if you don’t like something, don’t moan about it – get in and change it”. So she gathered current and former inspectors she considered as “experts in their field” to change the culture around quality improvement.
FIN was created as a collaborative community on the principle that “if providers place their focus on delivering high quality and put robust systems in place, then inspection will look after itself”.
Boffey claims it is still the only FE membership organisation focused solely on quality.
FIN includes serving Ofsted inspectors among its ranks, although they “have to be very careful what they can do”.
Its experts make themselves available to nominees in the run-up to inspections, so a remote meeting on a Sunday afternoon to run through a presentation, with feedback at 9pm, is “a regular occurrence”.
They give FIN members “unbiased and honest opinions” in “the heat of the moment” over whether they can complain about what an inspector has told them.
But more often they provide the “calm voice of reason”, with “tangible ideas on how to approach or evidence a forming judgment”.
Kerry Boffey speaking at this year’s Apprenticeships and Training conference
Lobbying behind the scenes
Much of Boffey’s work is done “in the background” and involves highlighting the inspection challenges that providers are experiencing with the watchdog.
Last year, FIN led a successful campaign calling for all providers, “regardless of size or complexity”, to be given a five-day notice period (instead of two) for inspections.
Boffey believes FE leaders face less anxiety over inspections than their school counterparts because the burden of judgment is shared more widely within their teams, with a shadow often appointed to support nominees.
She recently helped persuade Ofsted to allow schools to appoint nominees for the first time; before that, a headteacher was also the de facto nominee. Boffey is now “looking at getting much more involved with schools”.
The lull in inspections during the pandemic made things “quite difficult” for nominees who lacked that “external driver” to compel their provider to focus on quality improvement.
Boffey reminds her nominees they have the most influence in the aftermath of an inspection, when they can put the necessary processes in place to achieve a good result next time.
She thinks it would be helpful if Ofsted could tell providers post-inspection that “we could come back at any time” to prevent them from taking their eyes off the quality ball.
She would like to see more regular and less intense Ofsted inspections involving smaller teams, rather than one large team descending on a provider once every four years.
Boffey also believes it would be beneficial for all full-time HMIs to return to the coal face on secondment to the most challenging providers every three years, to help them “fully understand provision”.
Their “untapped talent pool” could also benefit the sector in return.
“Unless, of course, some HMIs would actually be out of their depth? Hopefully not,” Boffey adds.
Kerry Boffey with her dog
Meeting Martyn
It is surprising, and perhaps a sign of the aloofness of Ofsted’s central command, that Boffey has never met any of its chief inspectors. Given she has spent her life reflecting on how the inspectorate could be improved, you would think its chief inspector would be biting her hand off for a meeting.
Boffey is not offended by this. But if she could sit down with Martyn Oliver, she would tell him that Ofsted has “missed the boat” by not measuring every provider against local and national skills needs, given that this is such a government priority.
“The true value” of an apprenticeship lies in its “impact on a business” and “a company’s ability to retain staff”, she explains.
To make time for this assessment during an inspection, Boffey suggests Ofsted could stop judging providers on some of the Prevent and safeguarding training, and English and maths provision they are now expected to deliver, but which they are not paid for.
A professional services provider was recently criticised by inspectors for not having enough sexual health training. Boffey says as a customer, it would not be her “first priority” to choose an accountant who had had sexual health training.
“Maybe if [Ofsted’s] focus was the difference the provider is making to industry, the government wouldn’t be looking at removing some of the funding because they’d see the true value of this provision,” she adds.
FIN’s inspection bootcamp
Inclusion balloons
Unlike schools, FE providers have always been “really good at inclusion” – just not at proving it.
At the last two-day intense ‘inspection bootcamp’ that FIN held for its members, Boffey handed everyone a balloon representing learners with difficulties to illustrate inclusion; those who left their balloons unattended lost them.
Ofsted’s new data portal, FESIT, helps providers to evidence their disadvantaged learners. But it is not perfect; for example, someone on free school meals with a care background and from a disadvantaged postcode has three different indicators of need and could be counted three times within the data, which “could be distorting to a provider”.
Boffey would also like to see much greater recognition of the progress made by each individual learner, rather than inspectors’ reliance on achievement data.
Inspections in some ways replicate the checks DfE makes on providers. And HMIs are still far more interested in finding flaws than finding good-practice “pots of gold” to share across the sector.
“Collecting the floating rot is easy, digging for gold takes time and determination,” says Boffey.
Ofsted has also made it harder to attain the top inspection grade (‘exceptional’), which Boffey decries as “taking away aspiration”.
FIN charges all its members £960 a year plus VAT (just over £20 a week), regardless of their size, because “the smaller providers need the support from the bigger providers to share ideas”. Every resource created for one member is shared, so everyone can access it.
Quality reviews (essentially a mock inspection) are the most popular service among the providers who approach Boffey, but she warns them it is like “fishing for you for a day, as opposed to teaching you how to fish” which is what FIN’s full membership offers.
The reviews are a part of the job that the straight-talking Boffey clearly enjoys. “If I see a lesson that isn’t good, I’m not afraid to pull punches,” she says.
Her favourite moments are “when you can see that through the work you’ve done, those learners are getting a better experience”. Her most challenging reviews are when “a team aren’t listening to you”.
Overcoming adversity
Boffey and her husband’s own resilience was put to the test when their herd of 150 dairy cows, calves and 350 sheep were slaughtered in a cull during the foot and mouth disease outbreak, after some pigs on a nearby farm caught the disease.
Boffey’s husband would not allow the cull until a vet came to confirm their cattle were in fact “perfectly healthy”.
He sent his wife and their two daughters away and sat in the house alone, counting the shots as the animals fell onto the fresh straw he had laid down for them that morning.
“They’ve not just taken away my today, they’ve taken away my tomorrow,” she recalls him commenting.
Boffey learned from the incident that although she could not control what happened, she could control how she reacted to it.
In 2022, Boffey’s husband had a stroke, and then she was diagnosed with multiple myeloma (bone marrow cancer). This caused her to give up a sport she loved – rowing – but it did not stop her from working throughout much of her treatment.
She coached a provider over the phone from hospital, just moments before going in for her stem cell transplant.
Looking on in despair, her daughter turned to the nurse, shook her head and said, “I’ll be taking her phone off her!’”
Boffey did not tell her members about her illness and returned to work after treatment in a “great wig”. (Her fabulous hair has since grown back).
“It was a tough time, but adversity gives us an opportunity to rethink and find a way through it,” she says.
Boffey is now a grandmother to twin boys, and talks of “sharing the responsibility” more with her team in the future.
But she still goes skiing several times a year, and is keen to keep working to pay for those holidays.
“If I’m young and fit enough to ski, then I’m well and fit enough to work!” she asserts.
And Boffey clearly still deeply enjoys the day job. “How many people can actually say, ‘I think I made a difference today’ – that’s a great feeling,” she says. “ And if I don’t, then I need to do it better.”
Today is an exciting day: I chair the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Further Education and Lifelong Learning, and this afternoon (Monday 11th March) we will have the first session of our inquiry into adult education.
Announced during Colleges Week, our inquiry will put adult education in the spotlight and explore five key areas: economic growth, skills and workforce needs, social mobility and inclusion, health, wellbeing and community resilience, policy, funding and the future of lifelong learning and learning from across the UK and beyond.
I will be chairing the first session, and then I’m delighted to say that Lord Johnson of Marylebone, Sam Rushworth MP, Baroness Carmen Smith of Llanfaes, and Rachel Gilmour MP will chair the others.
As a group of MPs and peers from across Parliament, we are united in our desire to see real change in the adult education space, and it’s clear that the FE sector joins us on that. Indeed, there are three separate adult education campaigns currently active, led by Association of Colleges (Adult Learning Pays), Learning and Work Institute (Get the Nation Learning), and by UCU (Save Adult Education).
You don’t have to look far to see why: adult education in this country is in a dire state. Public funding for classroom-based adult education and training has fallen by two-thirds since the early 2000s. This has a very real impact on the opportunities available to adults, and indeed, the number of adults studying or training in English colleges have fallen by more than third since 2017-18.
It is a part of education that is underfunded and underappreciated, and yet one that is fundamental to how we equip our workforce and communities to deal with the major shifts our world.
We know that adults will need to upskill and retrain to meet the needs of the green agenda and technological revolution. We know that as unrest grows in our communities, access to community education builds cohesion, belonging and respect. Adult education transforms lives every single day, usually without fanfare, and our inquiry aims to shine a proper light on that.
One thing the FE sector always asks for is for policymakers to listen before acting. So instead of announcing a list of grand proposals, we are beginning by gathering evidence from all corners of the FE sector.
Through the Association of Colleges (who provide the secretariat to the group), we have launched an online call for evidence and survey so that colleges, training providers, employers and learners can submit their experiences and ideas easily. We want to understand what’s working, where the gaps are, and what changes would make the biggest difference. If you’re in the sector, please don’t be shy. We genuinely want to hear from you; this inquiry and subsequent report will only be as strong as the evidence we receive.
FE works best when people come together as employers, educators and policymakers. This APPG inquiry is determined to reflect that same spirit. I am looking forward to hearing the evidence we receive and to share our findings later this year. Together, we can strengthen lifelong learning for everyone and highlight the vital role of adult education.