DfE to fund maternity pay improvements in colleges

Colleges are set to receive additional funding to improve maternity pay for their staff, the Department for Education has announced.

The plans come ahead of the schools white paper, due on Monday, which will commit to double the period of full maternity pay for teachers and leaders from four weeks to eight weeks from academic year 2027-28.

Unlike maintained schools, the government has no formal role in setting pay and conditions for staff in further education colleges, meaning maternity policies vary by institution.

However additional funding “commensurate to investment in schools” will be paid to colleges to “support them to improve the maternity offer for their staff”, the DfE said in a statement.

Education secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “Having met so many incredible teachers and staff in schools and colleges, I’ve heard how tough it can be juggling between a career you love and starting a family, and I’m concerned that too many women feel they don’t have the support they need to make the right choice for them.”

It’s not yet clear how much funding colleges will receive, or how it will be calculated.

It comes amid government efforts to improve teacher retention, which is expected to be a theme in next week’s schools white paper alongside major reforms to the SEND system.

Poor retention of further education teachers was flagged in the post-16 education and skills white paper, published in October, citing research from the Institute for Fiscal Studies showing 60 per cent leave in their first five years.

While it did not suggest improvements to maternity pay, it did propose bonus payments to teachers in shortage subjects, a professional development framework and increased 16 to 19 funding to help colleges retain staff.

This is not the first time the government has sought to provide parallel funding for colleges alongside a schools-focussed announcement.

Colleges have previously been given additional funding alongside school teacher pay awards. However the funding for these have been allocated through colleges’ 16 to 19 funding, meaning colleges with larger adult education and apprenticeship provision lose out. Ministers at the time “encouraged” colleges to spend this funding on staff pay, but they have no power to force them.

The department has not yet confirmed how this upcoming funding towards maternity pay will be allocated or whether it will be ringfenced.

Apprenticeship reform: An opportunity to future‑proof skills and unlock career pathways

Apprenticeship reforms promise to simplify processes, reduce bureaucracy, and reflect the realities of modern work and learning. The education sector now has a unique opportunity to build something more accessible, more responsive, with a renewed focus on quality.

At City & Guilds, apprenticeships and quality have always been central to their mission. In September 2025, they marked an important milestone: over 100,000 apprenticeship end‑point assessments completed across industries including construction, engineering, digital, and health and social care. Behind those numbers are thousands of people unlocking career pathways, developing industry‑relevant expertise, and future‑proofing their skills in an ever‑changing world. This is apprenticeships at their best.

Rising confidence in apprenticeships

Apprenticeships have evolved far beyond their traditional image. Once seen as a vocational route for a handful of industries, they now range across multiple industries and are highly competitive. Colleges and training providers report growing appreciation among learners for the blend of practical experience and classroom learning. Employers, too, increasingly view apprenticeships as a vital solution to address skills shortages.

In the 2024/25 academic year, apprenticeship starts rose by 4.1% to 353,500, while participation increased to 761,480 learners. Higher-level apprenticeships are booming too: Level 6 and 7 starts jumped by 20.4%, now accounting for 17.1% of all starts. It shows clear confidence in the apprenticeship model across the board.
The reforms aim to build on this success by reducing bureaucracy and giving providers greater control over assessment. This means more flexibility for providers and a better learner experience.

Challenges and opportunities ahead

City & Guilds’ engagement with providers and employers highlights a strong sense of optimism about apprenticeship reforms, as long as quality remains central.
Employers welcome assessment approaches grounded in real‑world working environments to produce apprentices who are more “job‑ready” and better equipped for long‑term success.

Providers, meanwhile, appreciate the shift towards greater internal assessment. Many already have strong quality assurance, trained assessors and established digital processes, positioning them well for the transition. They point to benefits such as more control over scheduling, potential for reduced costs, and a calmer, more familiar assessment environment for learners.

While the sector is enthusiastic, there is recognition that the move to internal assessment may present challenges for smaller or less established awarding organisations (AOs). Adapting to the new requirements, particularly the need for robust quality assurance and digital capabilities, may stretch resources. Delivering consistent, high‑quality assessment at national level demands infrastructure, expertise and investment.

Why an expert skills partner matters

Awarding organisations have a central role to play in ensuring the success of the reforms. As occupational standards align across qualifications and apprenticeships, providers need partners who can help them navigate this shift.

As a leader in qualification and apprenticeship delivery, City & Guilds brings the scale and experience to help providers adapt with confidence, offering an integrated service that supports at every stage.

By working with a single awarding organisation across both qualifications and apprenticeships, providers can eliminate duplication, streamline delivery and benefit from a more joined‑up learner experience. As learners increasingly move between qualification‑based routes and apprenticeships, the value of an experienced AO that understands the full skills ecosystem becomes even more significant.

City & Guilds work with employers and providers to build programmes that are industry‑aligned and designed for long‑term success. Whether it’s future‑proofing skills, reducing administrative pressure or creating smoother learner journeys, they are committed to helping deliver pathways that truly change lives.

Embrace change with City & Guilds

The reforms represent a pivotal moment – a chance to shape an apprenticeship system that is better equipped to unlock career opportunities for learners of all ages. Providers and employers who embrace this shift, supported by partners with the expertise and capacity to guide them, will be at the forefront of delivering high‑quality, future‑focused apprenticeships.

City & Guilds is here to help you lead that change. Working together to build a system that not only meets today’s challenges but equips tomorrow’s workforce with the skills to thrive.

Find out more at cityandguilds.com/apprenticeship-reform

Welsh college pulls plug on England apprenticeships

One of Wales’s largest apprenticeship providers has confirmed it will withdraw from delivering apprenticeships in England.

Gower College Swansea currently supports just 27 apprentices in England – down from 45 at the time of a recent Ofsted inspection in November – and will now “teach out” the remainder by summer 2027.

The move comes after a report by the inspectorate criticised the college’s small English operation, delivered mostly online, for too many withdrawals and slow progress made by apprentices.

A spokesperson for the college told FE Week the decision to exit England’s apprenticeship market was, however, made before the inspection and was a “strategic” move taken by a new leadership team due to the provision’s “relatively small scale”.

From suspension to good to needs attention

Gower College Swansea trains 2,200 Welsh apprentices through the country’s ‘Medr Apprenticeship Commissioning Programme Wales Framework’, according to its latest financial statements that boast of award-winning delivery and achievement rates above 70 per cent for the past three years.

The college made the rare move to become a non-England based provider that delivers apprenticeships in England in October 2017, keeping its operation across the border at around 50 apprentices annually.

Its England-based delivery, which requires a different ruleset to Wales, initially struggled and starts were suspended by the Department for Education in 2019 after an Ofsted early monitoring visit found the college making ‘insufficient progress’ across the board.

The suspension was lifted after the college significantly improved and Ofsted judged the college as ‘good’ overall in 2021.

Gower College Swansea was criticised by the watchdog again in a report published last week under the inspectorate’s new report card approach.

Out of five areas judged, Ofsted said the college was hitting the ‘expected standard’ in two areas – inclusion and participation and development – and ‘needs attention’ in three areas – leadership and governance, achievement, and curriculum and teaching.

Safeguarding standards were met.

Gower College Swansea’s overall apprenticeship achievement rate for 2023-24 in England was 55 per cent, against a national average of 61 per cent. It delivers a range of standards between levels 2 to 5 in sectors like manufacturing and management.

Ofsted’s report said: “Too many apprentices in England do not make expected progress or complete their qualifications. 

“Although achievement rates improved on a few apprenticeships in 2024-25 and were high, the proportion of apprentices who achieved across other apprenticeships remained very low.”

It added that tutors and assessors “do not support the many apprentices with low levels of English and mathematics well enough to substantially improve these skills”.

Gower College Swansea does not have a base in England so delivers training to apprentices online, but with additional delivery supplied in person at employer partners’ premises predominantly across the south of England and the Midlands.

Ofsted criticised the college for a lack of routine meetings between apprentices, their assessor and line manager to review progress and plan learning together. 

“Although they can access online college services and resources, most choose not to, citing time pressures,” inspectors found, adding that “a few” apprentices “struggle to use the online system that enables them to track their progress”. 

The watchdog also said some apprentices do not receive the required protected off-the-job training time needed to complete their learning activities.

New leaders new ideas

Over the past year Gower College Swansea has brought in a new CEO and principal who have now decided to end delivery of apprenticeships in England.

Ofsted’s report noted that following a quality review, the college’s recently appointed senior leadership team “quickly and correctly identified most of the long-standing failings in the English apprenticeship provision” and implemented “comprehensive quality-improvement actions”.

However, sustained impact of the team’s actions was “not evident at the time of the inspection” and the team had not identified “shortcomings in the quality of training and support for apprentices with low English and mathematics skills”.

A Gower College Swansea spokesperson told FE Week: “Given the relatively small scale of the college’s English apprenticeship activity, leaders and governors made a strategic decision, prior to the inspection, to teach-out apprenticeship provision in England and to focus fully on supporting our existing apprentices to complete successfully. 

“This decision enables the college to concentrate its expertise and resources on its core Welsh provision in the future, where we are delivering strong outcomes for learners and employers.”

Apprenticeships were never just for the young – history proves it

Policymakers in Whitehall might do well to lift their gaze and consider a quiet irony: much of the Palladian grandeur of their surroundings was designed by an older, career-hopping apprentice.

Inigo Jones was in his thirties when he started to apprentice under Renaissance masters in architectural principles. He had already switched careers several times, working as a clothmaker, a joiner, and a theatrical set designer.  He was thirty-five years old when he produced his first architectural design, practically ancient by seventeenth century standards.

During these times of seismic reforms in the apprenticeship system, I find it useful to recall the ‘first principles’ of an apprenticeship. Contrary to Alan Milburn’s insistence that an apprenticeship should be an entry opportunity for young people, not in-work training for older people, the early guild system did not view apprenticeships as a one-off teenage intervention. It was a structured pathway into mastery often stretching well into adulthood. Apprenticing was occupationally anchored and deeply embedded in real economic activity.

Notions of a modern apprenticeship have shifted expectations, but the dual principles of developing mastery and economic capability should remain intact.

That’s why calls for restrictions on higher-level and older-age apprenticeships are historically illiterate, economically short-sighted and strategically dangerous. The political re-imagining of the apprenticeship ‘brand’, with shorter durations, apprenticeship units, and foundation apprenticeships, already risks dilution of the first principles, but “streamlining” the apprenticeship offer towards young people and lower-level training, and away from higher-level apprenticeships being taken-up by older workers risks degrading the apprenticeship brand even further, diminishing true career utility and effectively introducing a form of labour market warehousing where young people are “stored” in low-level training schemes to keep them off the unemployment statistics, without any intent to build their long-term value.

The proposals are an understandable political instinct as NEET (not in employment, education or training) figures for 16-24 year olds soar to decade-high levels.

But apprenticeships are fundamentally a tool for professional development, not a social policy safety net. Lately, I’ve talked to employer partners across hospitality, retail, and care sectors who agree. These sectors are struggling with era-defining pressures of labour shortages, razor-thin margins, soaring national insurance costs and policy-induced hiring paralysis, and right now they are desperate for one thing – workforce stability. This means their priority is not just attracting new workers into service industry jobs but holding onto them, and nurturing them into experts and leaders. In normal times, that responsibility may fall squarely on employers’ own budgets. But these are not normal times, and after all, the levy is employer-funded, and employers want to use it to meet the real skills needs of their businesses, not to compensate for policy failings elsewhere.

By focusing policy on the starting line of employment, the government may be heading towards a catastrophic failure of foresight which prioritises volume over value; a system which creates what economists like to call the ‘progression paradox’. The paradox being that the more government policy obsesses over “getting people in,” the more it structurally prevents them from “getting on,” turning what should be an escalator of opportunity into a low-wage, low-skill economy.

Admittedly the crash in under-25 starts is concerning. But I’ve heard no evidence that restricting older learners will automatically increase youth starts. If higher-level pathways are removed, employers are unlikely to magically redirect funds and efforts to recruiting and training more 16 – 18-year-olds; for one, there is a finite pool and a workforce that is aging demographically. Instead, employers may simply underinvest in training or return funds unused. The risk is that the system shrinks rather than rebalances.

The increase in apprentices aged 25 plus reflects structural shifts in the complexion of the labour market. Approximately four million people in the UK have changed careers since the pandemic, with research from recruitment company Michael Page consistently identifying thirty-one as the most common age for a complete career pivot. Covid triggered a mass exodus of workers aged 50-64. But by 2025, the cost of living crisis forced many to return to the workforce in entirely new roles, with many bringing experience beyond ‘entry level’.

Ultimately, by stripping away the opportunity for these older workers to reinvent themselves and for younger workers to rise into leadership, we aren’t solving a crisis; we are merely capping our nation’s potential.

An older apprentice built the original palace of Whitehall. We should be building a system that rewards aspiration at every age.

University hit by seven-figure apprenticeship clawback

A university has been forced to repay £1.385 million in apprenticeship funding after government investigators found widespread missing evidence of apprentices’ eligibility, off-the-job training, and employer co-investment contributions.

Birmingham-based Aston University was hit with the clawback after a Department for Education investigation found 11 breaches of apprenticeship funding rules between 2020-21 and 2023-24.

The university is one of the largest university apprenticeship providers in the country and received a ‘good’ Ofsted rating in 2024 when it was training over 1,000 apprentices.

According to a new investigation outcome report, the DfE’s then-Education and Skills Funding Agency launched a probe in October 2024 after it identified concerns with the “validity” of some of the university’s claims and “accuracy” of submitted data.

The report, which is lists off generic rule breaches, found the university failed to check eligibility of all learners and to retain evidence of their eligibility as well as completed and signed apprenticeship agreements.

Aston University also failed to accurately record the start and end dates for some apprentices, could not demonstrate apprentices were involved in active learning throughout the apprenticeship or provide accurate off-the-job training records.

Investigators additionally found the university did not retain evidence to show apprentices were exempt from functional skills or that they were undergoing training, lacked evidence of employer co-investment contributions being collected, and could not prove that assessment of prior learning and experience was conducted before apprentices started their programme.

Aston University has already repaid the £1.385 million that the government said was overclaimed and has “commenced” implementing improvements.

The university has not faced any suspension on starts or contract termination.

A spokesperson for the university said the report concerned “legacy issues” and prior to the government’s review the university “commissioned an external audit firm to produce a report and action plan which has been wholly implemented”.

“The university through its own governance, audit and risk processes undertook to rectify all legacy issues by also engaging external expert oversight for transparency and accuracy,” the spokesperson added.

Aston University has been offering higher level apprenticeships since 2017 in business, healthcare, digital, engineering, and logistics. It is also a lead partner of the Greater Birmingham & Solihull Institute of Technology (IoT).

The university recorded an overall achievement rate of 57.5 per cent in 2023-24.

Aston University’s spokesperson added: “We are committed to excellence in all aspects of our degree apprenticeship provision that has Ofsted good assessment, and this year our BSc (Hons) digital and technology solutions degree apprenticeship was awarded tech industry gold accreditation in recognition of its effectiveness in preparing learners for successful careers in the digital and technology sector.”

Greater Lincolnshire set to cut ESOL courses from 2027, Reform UK mayor confirms

Greater Lincolnshire’s mayor will press ahead with plans to scrap publicly funded English language courses from 2027, despite a majority of consultation responses opposing the move.

Papers published ahead of a Greater Lincolnshire Combined County Authority (GLCCA) meeting next week have confirmed Reform UK mayor Andrea Jenkyns wants to withdraw funding for English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) provision through the adult skills fund (ASF) from August 2027.

Jenkyns said the courses don’t benefit the “native” Lincolnshire people who elected her and plans to redirect funding to “more inclusive” English literacy and numeracy courses.

But results from a consultation run over Christmas show that almost three-quarters of the 375 people and organisations that responded disagreed or strongly disagreed with the proposals.

Anonymised comments raised concerns that ESOL is a “lifeline” that prevents non-English speakers from being “effectively excluded” from society and warned that cutting funding could “reduce the pool of skilled workers” available to the regions strategic industries such as port logistics.

Supportive comments focused on the benefits of redirecting funding towards literacy, which “affects life chances”.

An analysis included from Lincoln College, the largest ESOL provider in the region, argued that 90 per cent of learners who achieve the course move into positive destinations such as employment or further study, contributing £1,700 per year more to the local economy than they would if they had not.

Lincoln College’s ESOL learner statistics for 2023-24 and 2024-25 suggest that about a third of its students came from Ukraine, with other common nationalities including Turkey, Bulgaria and Afghanistan.

The decision, which is due to be debated and formally approved at a combined authority meeting next week (February 25), will “end funding” for ESOL courses in 2027 and re-introduce a three-year residency rule for learners to receive free or subsidised courses in August this year, and commits to designing a “new literacy qualification” to help adults into employment.

An impact assessment admits that while mayor Jenkyns’ move to “free up” the £1 million spend on ESOL each year in favour of literacy will offer non-English speakers “integrated learning experiences”, the plans may also negatively impact people from refugees and people from ethnic minority backgrounds.

As a mitigation, the authority said “delaying” the defunding a year later than planned to 2027 will allow time for the training sector to “adjust their provision to reduce the impact” and to develop a new curriculum or syllabus that is “open to all”.

Responding to the consultation, GLCCA noted that around half of consultation responses were from people “directly involved” in the sector, or experts and specialists, who are “more motivated” to raise concerns.

The residency rule, which could affect the estimated 5,800 people who move to Greater Lincolnshire each year, will be mitigated through an exemption for armed forces personal, refugees, victims of domestic abuse, and people who have moved to England under the Ukraine, Afghan, and Hong Kong British National (Overseas) visa schemes.

Other updates to Greater Lincolnshire’s draft adult skills fund rules, which will apply when adult skills is devolved in August, include funding of up to £58 per learner for Construction Skills and Certification Scheme labourers’ cards for unemployed learners and “enhanced support” for young care leavers worth up to £1,500 per learner.

Paul Sceeny, co-chair of the National Association for Teaching English and other Community Languages to Adults, said: “A delay is obviously welcome, if only because it averts an immediate crisis for providers with the risk of significant job losses. 

“Nonetheless, worrying it is that the Authority still doesn’t seem to appreciate the vital importance of dedicated ESOL provision to community integrity and economic prosperity.

“A further year might provide more space for all of us who understand and value the importance of language education to press our case, as well as enabling providers to develop more extensive contingency plans.”

Diana Sutton, director of the Bell Foundation, an ESOL-focused charity, said Greater Lincolnshire’s decision was disappointing.

She added: “Suggesting that learners acquire English language through online, private, or voluntary provision will not fill the gap.

“Furthermore, the proposed one ‘literacy qualification for all’ cannot address the specific language learning needs of ESOL learners.

“Literacy and language learning are fundamentally different with literacy provision designed to meet the needs of first-language English speakers to improve their reading and writing skills.”

David Hughes, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said: “I’m concerned that the decision to stop funding ESOL comes before the work to co-create a new curriculum to replace it. If the intention is to support the residents of Greater Lincolnshire to achieve greater proficiency in English, so that they can be active citizens and secure good jobs, then I’d like to see that curriculum work conclude before any decision to simply stop funding ESOL.”

GLCCA was approached for comment.

Julie McCulloch to join EPI as new chief executive

Julie McCulloch has been appointed as the new chief executive of The Education Policy Institute (EPI).

McCulloch is senior director of strategy, policy and professional development at the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), and is currently on a secondment as head of policy at the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF).

She said she was “hugely privileged” to join the EPI, an independent research institute that aims to raise standards in education.

Her appointment comes after EPI co-founder Natalie Perrera stepped down as CEO of the think tank at the end of January, to take up a senior role at the country’s largest exam board, AQA. Perrera had been at the helm of the EPI since its creation in 2015.

McCulloch, who spent 11 years at Pearson in policy roles before joining ASCL in 2015, will join EPI at the beginning of May.

Prof Sir Chris Husbands

Professor Sir Chris Husbands, chair of the board of trustees at EPI, said: “I am delighted to be able to welcome Julie as the chief executive to take EPI into its second decade.”

Husbands said McCulloch was “outstanding” in “a very strong field” of candidates. 

“Her grasp of the education policy landscape, her understanding of the challenges and opportunities facing the organisation and her leadership qualities made her an ideal leader for EPI.”

McCulloch said: “Over the last decade EPI has relentlessly championed the importance of using independent evidence to improve educational outcomes and to narrow the disadvantage gap.

“I feel hugely privileged to join such an exceptional team as chief executive, and I look forward to collaborating with our partners across the research and policy landscape to build on that vital work.”

Suella Braverman named Reform UK’s skills spokesperson

Former Conservative home secretary and recently-defected Reform UK MP Suella Braverman has been named as the party’s education and skills spokesperson.

Leader Nigel Farage today announced his “shadow cabinet”, with Braverman given the education, skills and equalities brief.

Braverman defected from the Conservative Party to Reform UK last month, claiming she had been “politically homeless” for the past two years.

Farage claimed at a press conference earlier today that parents “all over this country are in a state of despair about what their children are being taught at school”.

Braverman served as home secretary twice. She was initially appointed to the role in September 2022 by Liz Truss, but resigned in October 2022 after she sent an official document to a parliamentary colleague using her personal email address.

She was re-appointed by new prime minister Rishi Sunak days later, but then sacked in a 2023 reshuffle.

Before Parliament, Braverman worked as a lawyer and was co-founder and chair of governors at Michaela Community School, known for its strict behaviour policies, high progress 8 scores and outspoken headteacher, Katharine Birbalsingh.

Speaking to the press earlier today, Braverman claimed a “quiet crisis has taken hold” across schools, with the authority of teachers being “eroded” by “violence and disorder”.

Trades target

Farage, who said skills has “been ignored for too long”, announced Braverman’s appointment alongside spokespeople covering business, home affairs and the treasury.

Braverman said universities are “failing our young people”.

“Today, 700,000 graduates are unemployed, each of them carrying, on average, £50,000 worth of student debt. The truth is that too many of our young people have been sold a lie about university, wasting three years of their lives on Mickey Mouse courses, all while we have a chronic shortage of nurses, builders and care workers.

“So I tell you what we need. Instead of Tony Blair’s 50 per cent of young people going to university, this is what we need. We need Nigel Farage’s [target] 50 per cent of young people going into trades.”

“That’s what will produce the next generation of carpenters, electricians that our contry is crying out for. All to work in a thriving manufacturing sector.

“These are noble professions, and these will be the people who rebuild Britain. And to those universities that have descended into hotbeds of cancel culture, antisemitism and which survive thanks to the case foreign students and keep conning young people into worthless degrees, Reform is putting you on notice.”

Fellow recent defector Robert Jenrick was announced as Reform UK’s pick for chancellor if the party wins the next general election, while former education secretary Nadim Zahawi has not been given a position.

Stop blaming level 7 and management apprenticeships. Non-compliance could be the real problem

Amid the talk of certain apprenticeships not being “appropriate” for government funding, it’s time to be honest about a problem hiding in plain sight. One that needs to be addressed before the axe comes down on funding for operations manager, team leader or any other apprenticeships.

It is likely that many of the so-called “apprenticeships” delivered to adults and funded by the levy are not actually apprenticeships at all.

Had they not been funded, the number of true adult apprentices would not have increased by anything like as much, freeing up money for more apprenticeships for younger people and genuine adult apprentices, including up to level 7 where funding has now ceased for the over 21s.

It’s not too late to fix the problem, but time is short.

It’s worth reminding ourselves of the rules.

  • All government-funded apprentices have a right to receive the amount of off-the-job training they need to reach occupational competence. Every apprenticeship has a minimum requirement but there’s but no maximum. In most cases the minimum is set at roughly six hours a week. So, just less than a working day each week.
  • Off-the-job-training (all of it – not just the minimum required) must happen during the apprentice’s normal paid working hours. If, by exception, training takes place outside these hours then, a bit like paid overtime, the apprentice must agree and must be paid. It makes no difference how the training is delivered.
  • If there is insufficient off-the-job training, or training takes place outside paid working hours, the apprenticeship is not compliant or fundable.
  • The agreed off-the-job training requirement serves as proxy for the size of the apprentice’s skills needs. The absolute minimum is 187 hours of training over 8 months –  most apprentices need significantly more. This means someone with modest skills needs (a few discrete management topics, say, or they want to learn how to use AI tools to help them in their role) is unlikely to be eligible.

So, for an employer, a genuine apprenticeship is a huge investment, regardless of government funding for the actual training.

Take an operations manager on £50,000 a year, or £25 per hour. The employer, manager and training provider review their skills needs and agree they need 418 hours of training (the usual minimum for the operations manager apprenticeship).

This means the employer has to make an investment just in salary (excluding NI and other costs) of £10,450 (418 x £25). True investment is more because of lost productivity during the training period and the need to cover the apprentice’s work.

The level 6 chartered manager apprenticeship has a minimum requirement of 926 hours and, at this level, the apprentice will be paid more. Do the maths.

No sensible employer makes this kind of investment unless they have a colleague with great potential but a significant skills shortfall. I’m pleased to know many employers who regularly make such investments, and the returns to their organisations and colleagues are huge.

However, I fear this is not the case across the sector. I suspect that, too often, the skills gap is narrow or significant off-the-job training is taking place outside normal paid hours. 

I bet I’m not the only person who has come across degree apprentices who get six hours a week of study time at work but also need to study at the weekend (and not just on an occasional basis). I’m sorry but they are not apprentices.

To free up money for more apprenticeships for young people and for older people with significant skills needs, the government needs to ask:

  • How many apprentices are doing significant amounts of study in their own, unpaid time?
  • How many apprentices are not actually undertaking the minimum required amount of off-the-job study (regardless of what might be recorded)?

This is fiddly work. It means having honest conversations with employers, apprentices and providers. It may cause some pain, even embarrassment. And it’s harder than simply drawing a line through “inappropriate” apprenticeships or putting in place more age restrictions.

But it’s the right thing to do.

Age restrictions and de-funding would capture some ineligible apprentices but also harm eligible apprentices from disadvantaged backgrounds, those with “squiggly” careers and later-life career changers. It would be unfair on the many fantastic employers already investing more than the minimum and following the rules.

And so, if we are to ensure access to great apprenticeships for those who need them, and maximise the impact of apprenticeships on our economy, it is work that needs to be done.