Animal care awarding body acquired by private equity-backed firm

A veterinary awarding body has been bought by a private equity-backed company.

VetSkill Ltd was acquired by Phenna Group last week to operate under the firm’s animal welfare and food safety division.

It marks the latest private equity investment into the further education and skills training arena.

Phenna Group was sold by private equity firm Inflexion in 2022 to fellow private equity investor Oakley Capital.

VetSkill is recognised by Ofqual to offer around 25 qualifications in the animal care space and is a government-approved assessment body for more than 10 apprenticeship standards.

Government stats show VetSkill awarded over 1,500 certificates in the last two years and completed over 1,200 end-point assessments for apprentices between 2020 and 2024. Its latest accounts show the company had 176 employees for the year ending December 31, 2024.

Leslie Heaton-Smith, exiting founder of VetSkill, said: “By joining Phenna Group, VetSkill will be better placed to take advantage of growth opportunities, expand its market presence into new sectors and position itself for a very successful future.”

Phenna Group is headquartered in Nottingham and invests in niche, independent Testing, Inspection, Certification and Compliance (TICC) companies that serve multiple sectors including the built environment, infrastructure and food and life sciences.

VetSkill will come under the leadership of E&J, Phenna Group’s specialist veterinary public health certification and inspection business. 

A spokesperson for Phenna said E&J works with the government to “safeguard animal welfare within abattoirs and ensure that meat is safe to enter the food chain”.

The addition of VetSkill “enables E&J to diversify its range of services by providing qualification and assessment capabilities”.

Charles Hartwell, Phenna Group’s divisional managing director for food and life sciences in the UK and CEO of E&J, said: “I’m delighted to welcome VetSkill into the E&J family. Their strong reputation, sector expertise, and commitment to high-quality assessment aligns perfectly with our values. I’m very much looking forward to supporting Sam and the VetSkill team as we continue to grow and broaden our impact.”

VetSkill CEO Sam Double added: “This is a significant strategic step for VetSkill to allow us to build on our current successes and continue a trajectory of growth. I am excited to be working alongside Charles, E&J, and the wider Phenna Group as we expand VetSkill’s qualification and assessment portfolio and align our shared values to inspire even more learners and apprentices to success.”

WorldSkills UK national finals: Welsh colleges top 2025 medal table

Cardiff and Vale College and Pembrokeshire College have been awarded joint first at this year’s WorldSkills UK national finals.

Welsh colleges dominated the top of the medal table, which this year featured 12 colleges taking the top five positions on medal points. Only three were English colleges.

This week’s skills competitions saw over 400 learners and apprentices participating in 47 skills after two days of gruelling tasks in their chosen specialisms.

Both Cardiff and Pembrokeshire colleges won 13 total medal points each, taking first spot in the league table. They were followed by Scotland’s New College Lanarkshire and Northern Ireland’s Southern Regional College, which each got 12 medal points.

A gold medal is worth four points, a silver is worth three points, a bronze is worth two and a highly commended place scores one.

Learners from Cardiff and Vale College took home gold medals in automotive body repair and network infrastructure technician, one silver in heavy vehicle technology, and two highly commended in the beauty therapist and IT support technician contests.

Meanwhile, Pembrokeshire College students won gold in culinary arts, two silver in restaurant service and beauty therapy practitioner, as well as a bronze in welding and highly commended in the metal fabricator skill.

Cheshire College South and West was the highest ranking English college, placing joint fourth with ten medal points alongside Wales’ Bridgend College and Grwp Llandrillo Menai.

With nine medal points, Burnley College and East Coast College came joint fifth with Coleg Cambria and NPTC Group of Colleges. 

A foundation skills medal ceremony was held to celebrate competitors with SEND in eight national competition finals held today.

See the full winner’s list here

Jacqui Smith, minister for skills, said:”These exceptional young people showcase the very best of UK talent and represent the future of our economy, and I would like to congratulate them all on their outstanding achievements.”

Peter Heggie, a digital construction competitor from New College Lanarkshire, won gold as well as Callum Patience for mechanical engineering: CAD.

Southern Regional College’s duo Ross Graham and Carter McKnight won gold in mechatronics and automotive refinishing champion Jack Harvison was also awarded gold.

The gold for automation went to Mallaghan Engineering apprentices Teagan Dorman and Odhran McClusky from South West College (pictured above).

Apprentice Toby Moulder, from APM Fire and Security, won gold in electronic fire and security systems, told FE Week about how he thought he performed.

“I felt like it went brilliantly. I managed to have surprisingly quite a lot of time left to triple check everything. So I made sure everything was 100 per cent, and luckily, I’ve come home with the gold,” he said.

Other gold medal winners were the digital media production team from North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College, Airbus UK’s aircraft maintenance apprentice Robert Jones and Belal Al Haka, automotive body repair winner from Cardiff and Vale College.

Meanwhile, in the plumbing skill, Dillon Newton from Cornwall College Group won gold, Jackson Gill from New College Durham won silver, while Jack Fenton from Belfast Metropolitan College and Tristan McGrath from South West College won highly commended awards respectively.

Speaking to FE Week at the ceremony, Newton said the competitions have inspired him to help the next generation of plumbers,

“Obviously I’d like to finish my apprenticeship and then I would quite like to stay involved in the college in more of maybe a mentorship role,” he said.

High praise for high-flyers

178 winners were announced after months of local and regional qualifiers and an intense competition spread across South Wales this week.

The 417 finalists were selected from nearly 7,900 registrations from colleges, training providers and a record number of employers this year.

This year’s winners will be invited to start the WorldSkills UK training schedule in preparation for WorldSkills Aichi in Japan in 2028.

Ben Blackledge, chief executive of WorldSkills UK, said: “Congratulations to all those who participated in the WorldSkills UK national competitions.  They have demonstrated their skills at the highest level, and these exceptional young people represent the future of our economy.  

“They are the new generation of high-flyers that will give UK employers a competitive edge.  Our competitions, based on global standards, play a vital role in developing the skills that will drive investment, create jobs, and fuel economic growth.”

WorldSkills UK: 2025 foundation skills medallists announced

The UK’s most talented young foundation skills learners have been named at the end of an intense day of competitions at the WorldSkills UK national finals in Wales.

Forty-two students have won gold, silver and bronze medals in foundation skills competition finals in catering, creative media, digital, enterprise, hairdressing, health and social care, horticulture and restaurant services.

The competitions took place at Cardiff and Vale College this morning, which brought together over 70 SEND and high needs competitors from across the UK.

The college’s atrium was transformed this afternoon to host a medal ceremony to announce the winners. The full results are below.

Marion Plant, chair of WorldSkills UK and principal of North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College, said: “Congratulations to all those who took part. Your involvement demonstrates to employers that you have the skills and the mindset to succeed in the workplace.

“Foundation skills is one of the programmes I am most proud of as chair.”

Bridgend College took home two gold medals, in the digital and enterprise competitions, whilst Pembrokeshire College won gold medals in horticulture and creative media.

The two Welsh colleges were ranked joint first place out of the 20 participating providers with a total of 12 medal points each.

Gold medals are worth four points, a silver is worth three points, a bronze is worth two and a highly commended place scores one.

North Warwickshire & South Leicestershire College came in second place with 10 medal points, winning one gold from Sawda Khalifa in hairdressing, a silver in catering, bronze in health and social care, and highly commended in hairdressing.

Four providers tied for the third spot in the medal table, all with four medal points. They were DN Colleges Group, Elidyr Communities Trust, New College Lanarkshire and NPTC Group of Colleges.

In the restaurant services skill, Zara Fisher from NPTC Group of Colleges swooped into first place, while Eva Ribons from Gower College Swansea won silver and Coleg Gwent’s Emily Boulton took home the bronze award.

In horticulture, Pembrokeshire College’s Junior Rozhon and Matthew Duncombe came away with gold and silver awards, and Riverside College’s Aimee-Leigh Phillips won bronze. Two highly commended prizes were awarded to Russell Reeves from Elidyr Communities Trust and Celyn Sollis from Pembrokeshire College.

Foundation skills medallists 2025:

Catering

Gold: Destini Bryan, DN Colleges Group

Silver: Mollie Clark, North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College

Bronze: Brooklands College

Highly commended: Bridgend College


Creative media

Gold: Denver Picton, Dylan Raymond, Phoebe Stannett from Life Skills Academy, Pembrokeshire College

Silver: Rowan Love, Jack Bowler, Ella Evans from TEAM AWESOME, Coleg y Cymoedd

Bronze: Tommaso Montagino, Harry Metcalfe, John Subala from Burnley College Brood, Burnley College


Digital

Gold: Jesse Owen, Bridgend College

Silver: George Hennessey, Middlesbrough College

Bronze: Cathal Conolly, South West College

Highly commended: Oscar Adams, Weston College


Enterprise

Gold: Abi Thomas, Sophie Davies-Jones, Bethany Johns from Project StepUp, Bridgent College

Silver: Susan Bell, Leon Deane, Faith Hale from Cwtsh Creations, Elidyr Communities Trust

Bronze: Mairah Taj, Natalia Siwy, Yusuf Asif from Itec’s Finest, Itec Skills & Employment


Hairdressing

Gold: Sawda Khalifa, North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College

Silver: Ellie Bennett, The Oldham College

Bronze: Jasmine Barry, Homefield College

Highly commended: Tigerlily Lloyd, North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College


Health and social care

Gold: Kate Halsey, New College Lanarkshire

Silver: Leila Spree, Harlow College

Silver: Jack Jones, Bridgend College

Bronze: Sophie McNally, North Warwickshire and South Leicestershire College


Horticulture

Gold: Junior Rozhon, Pembrokeshire College

Silver: Matthew Duncombe, Pembrokeshire College

Bronze: Aimee-Leigh Phillips, Riverside College

Highly commended: Russell Reeves, Elidyr Communities Trust

Highly commended: Celyn Sollis, Pembrokeshire College


Restaurant Services

Gold: Zara Fisher, NPTC Group of Colleges

Silver: Eva Robins, Gower College Swansea

Bronze: Emily Boulton, Coleg Gwent


Results from the mainstream competitions can be found here.

UCU reveals January strike days in 32 colleges

Teachers at 32 colleges are set to hit the picket lines during the January exam period in strikes over pay and workloads.

Following the results of an England-wide ballot last week, the University and College Union (UCU)’s further education committee has decided to enact its mandate for industrial action early next year.

Staff will walk out on January 14, 15 and 16, during which several exams for vocational and technical qualifications will be set.

UCU members in 33 of the 68 colleges passed the required 50 per cent turnout threshold and backed strike action. This list now includes Myerscough College, whose strike ballot closed earlier this week, and strikes at York College have now been called off.

The move is likely to disrupt nearly two dozen Pearson BTEC exams as well as several WJEC level 1/2 technical awards that will be sat during the three strike days. AQA’s final applied general exams will take place on strike day 1.

UCU opened a nationwide ballot in October after the “disappointing” 4 per cent pay rise recommendation from the Association of Colleges earlier this year.

Out of the 68 balloted colleges, 90 per cent of their voting members supported strike action, said UCU.

Twenty-one colleges did not meet the legal 50 per cent turnout threshold, and a further 17 already settled their disputes with college employers after agreeing new pay deals worth up to 8.7 per cent and will not take part in the upcoming strikes.

The union’s ‘new deal for FE’ campaign demands pay parity with school teachers, a national workload agreement and binding national bargaining.

College teachers earn, on average, £9,000 less than their counterparts in schools, according to UCU.

UCU general secretary Jo Grady said: “College bosses are now on notice, if they refuse to come back to the negotiating table and make staff fair offers that help close the pay gap between school and college teachers then, come January, there will be huge disruption on campuses across England.”

She added: “Our demands are reasonable, and the 33 colleges facing action need to look at the 17 that worked to settle our disputes if they want to avoid action.

“It is also now high time employers worked with us to secure meaningful sectoral bargaining so we can end this disruptive year-on-year cycle of strike ballots and action.”

David Hughes, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said he was “disappointed” after the ballot results were released last week.

“I hope it doesn’t come to fruition as it’s the students who will suffer,” he said at the time.

“AoC and college leaders have shown over many years now how committed they are to improving pay and conditions, as far as their funding will allow. We know, as do the unions, that any campaigning and action really needs to be directed nationally to secure commitments and investment from government to address the pay gap with schools and industry.”

Striking colleges:

  1. Abingdon & Witney College
  2. Barnet & Southgate College
  3. Bournemouth and Poole College of FE
  4. Bradford College
  5. Brockenhurst College
  6. Capital City College
  7. Chesterfield College
  8. City College Norwich
  9. City of Bristol College
  10. City of Liverpool College
  11. City of Portsmouth College
  12. City of Wolverhampton College
  13. East Sussex College Group
  14. Hugh Baird College
  15. Isle of Wight College
  16. Kirklees College
  17. Lakes College West Cumbria
  18. Lancaster and Morecambe College
  19. Loughborough College Group
  20. Morley College
  21. Myerscough College
  22. New College Swindon
  23. Runshaw College
  24. SK College Group
  25. South & City College
  26. South Bank Colleges
  27. Stanmore College
  28. The Sheffield College
  29. Truro & Penwith College
  30. Windsor Forest Colleges Group
  31. Wirral Met College
  32. WM College

MOVERS AND SHAKERS: EDITION 515

Kate Shoesmith

Director of Policy and Insights, British Chamber of Commerce

Start date: December 2025

Previous job: Deputy CEO, Recruitment & Employment Federation

Interesting fact: Kate loves her garden and can usually be found pottering outdoors at home or on frequent holidays in France


Anna Trethewey

Chief Strategy and Vocational Officer, AQA

Start date: February 2026

Previous Job: Chief Corporate Affairs and Strategy Officer, AQA

Interesting fact: In her early teaching days, Anna also played the bass and sang in a band called The Starry Smooth Hounds


Dale Bassett

Chief Qualifications Officer, AQA

Start date: February 2026

Previous job: Director of Curriculum and Assessment, United Learning

Interesting fact: Dale used to own a cabaret bar and hosted performers including Tony Award-winning Broadway stars, Corrie’s Jodie Prenger and the cast of The Lion King

Revealed: The 2025 Pearson Teaching Awards winners

Sixteen teachers, leaders, schools, and colleges have been honoured for excellence in education at the 2025 Pearson National Teaching Awards.

Outgoing FE Commissioner Shelagh Legrave scooped the awards’ highest honour, receiving the Lord David Puttnam Award for Lifetime Contribution to Education. 

Dubbed “the Oscars of the teaching profession,” eight ‘gold awards’ were announced for the first time on Saturday at a glitzy ceremony in London, with the rest revealed during the week on the BBC’s The One Show and in The Sunday Times.

Categories awarded individuals and institutions from early years, primary, secondary and further education that go above and beyond for their learners, having a lasting impact on their lives, on the profession and in their local communities. 

Judges selected the winners from thousands of nominations, revealing 93 shortlisted ‘silver award’ winners in June.

Education secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “Teachers and school staff are the heart of our education system, inspiring young people and helping them to achieve and thrive. These awards are a powerful reminder of the life-changing impact great educators have, because the path to national renewal runs through our schools.

“My warmest congratulations to all of this year’s winners and nominees – your hard work, care, and commitment shape futures, and I’m proud to work with you to break down barriers to opportunity.”
 
Sharon Hague, managing director of school assessment and qualifications at Pearson UK, added: “Behind every confident student or changed life, there’s an educator who made it possible.

“The Pearson National Teaching Awards shines a spotlight on the inspiring individuals whose influence has gone far beyond the classroom. This is a celebration of excellence at the highest level, and we are thrilled to be able to recognise these achievements. Congratulations to all of this year’s Gold winners!”

Legrave’s lifetime achievement

Shelagh Legrave, the outgoing Further Education Commissioner, was awarded The Lord David Puttnam Award for Lifetime Contribution to Education. 

Awarded by the Teaching Awards Trust trustees, recipients are required to have worked directly or indirectly in education for 30 years, and to have had an impact across a whole region or nation while earning the “broad respect” of the teaching profession. 

Former winners include trade unionist Fred Jarvis and former education secretary Estelle Morris. 

The special award was presented at the end of this evening’s ceremony by the chair of the Teaching Awards Trust, Professor Tony Salt. 

Legrave became the Department for Education’s Further Education Commissioner in 2021. 

Before becoming FE Commissioner, Legrave was chief executive of Chichester College Group. 

Accepting the accolade this evening, Legrave said: “I really don’t believe I deserve it, but everybody in this room changes lives through learning.

“This is for further education. It has been an absolute privilege to work in colleges, and a university, and subsequently the Department for Education. We really do make a difference.”


Nominations for the 2026 awards are now open – you can submit your entry here.

The Award for FE Lecturer of the Year

Winner: Lisa Charles, North East Surrey College of Technology

What the judges said: Lisa Charles is not just a lecturer – she is a life-changer.

A hairdressing lecturer at Nescot, Lisa uses her own educational challenges to bring empathy and lived experience to her teaching. For over 13 years, she has inspired learners from all backgrounds, from helping a young woman from a traveller community with no prior education achieve top academic and vocational results, to supporting a brain injury survivor re-learn basic skills and regain independence through her studies after being rejected from other colleges.

Alongside her teaching, Lisa ensures that she and her students are giving back to the community.  She has built partnerships with organisations like the Royal Marsden, Toni & Guy, L’Oréal, and the Salvation Army, giving students real-world experience while instilling a sense of purpose. From organising pop-up salons for young cancer patients to driving sustainability through the Green Salon Collective, Lisa leads by example and changes lives along the way. 


Outstanding New Teacher of The Year

Shona McFayden, Bedford College, Bedfordshire

Diagnosed with liver failure and cancer at a young age, Shona lived for years shadowed by uncertainty, balancing her studies with the knowledge that she needed a life-saving transplant. Her determination for a teaching career was a motivator and incentive to chase a full recovery, and this personal journey gives her teaching a unique depth and authenticity.

Shona champions innovative approaches, from using interactive VR in science investigations to adapting lessons so they support students facing difficult personal circumstances. Beyond the classroom, she founded the Impact Makers programme, a student-led charity that has raised hundreds of pounds for local care homes and hospices.

Shona teaches students first-hand the value of perseverance, goal-setting and gratitude for opportunity.


FE Team of the Year

South Gloucestershire and Stroud College – Filton and Stroud Campuses, Bristol

This Bristol College ESOL provision offers a lifeline to migrants settling in the UK, helping them learn a new language, find their voice, and connect with their new community and country.

Accepting the award this evening, Sarah Kopera, head of SGS life, said from the stage: “Broken English is not broken potential.”

The programme is about equipping learners with the language and social skills they need to live confidently and independently. From role-play scenarios like GP appointments, job interviews, and school-gate conversations with other parents, to navigating housing and healthcare systems, the ESOL curriculum is built around real-life situations that empower learners to engage fully in society. The team also supports with housing issues, signposting services, and developing trauma-informed approaches for those carrying the weight of past experiences, including war and displacement.

Success stories include a Ukrainian nurse now working as a phlebotomist in the NHS; a former learner running her own donut business; a parent finally able to speak English with her child after school; and countless others who’ve gone on to further qualifications, employment, and full participation in British life.

The tutors themselves reflect the communities they serve. Many have refugee or migrant connections, which helps foster trust and understanding with their learners.

Over the past eight years, this programme has grown from just four classes a week to over 28, reflecting the increasing demand from learners determined to thrive in their new home.


Transformational Use of Digital Technology

The Oaks Specialist College, Kent

At The Oaks Specialist College, the Accessibility Team has reimagined how everyday technologies, from smartphones to AI tools, can unlock opportunities where young people with learning difficulties often struggle to progress.

By embedding built-in accessibility features into daily learning, students can now participate where once they were passive. Louis now uses text-to-speech to enjoy books and prepare for work; Ethan was given the confidence and tools to travel independently to Leeds; and another student, James accesses his favourite comics through new digital tools.

The Oaks is now recognised as a Microsoft Showcase College, and its Accessibility Team is shaping practice across the country. The team deliver workshops to other education provisions and to larger commercial businesses. Companies such as Balfour Beatty, Tesco and Mitie have benefited from ‘lightbulb moment’ sessions to make their workplaces more inclusive and supportive of those using everyday technology for accessibility.

Seventy-two per cent of learners from Oaks progress into paid employment, compared to a national average of just 4.8 per cent for those with learning disabilities in the general population.


SEND and Inclusive Practice

Winner: Abbot’s Lea School, North West

What the judges said: No pupil is turned away from Abbot’s Lea. Its zero-exclusion policy and pioneering ASD model – combining academic progress, specialist therapeutic support, and life skills development – ensures students with Autism and complex needs are supported to thrive.

Their inclusive approach includes an in-house ADHD clinic, helping to reduce missed NHS appointments and school absences by making sure students get the health services support they need without missing class. To keep families closely involved, the school holds weekly open-house assemblies and coffee mornings.

The school’s approach has challenged students to become the best versions of themselves. Graduates leave Abbot’s Lea confident, resilient, and work-ready, with many moving into employment, some even joining the school’s own staff team.


School or College Partnership of the Year

Shetland School/College Partnership Programme for S5/6 students. UHI Shetland, Scotland

In Shetland – a remote group of islands north of mainland Scotland – education is truly unique, with a focus on real-life practice and community. With a population of around 22,900 and key industries like fishing, farming, health and social care, energy, and construction, the local economy relies on skilled, adaptable people.

The Shetland School/College Partnership Programme is helping young people step into those roles with real-world experience. This isn’t just about filling skills gaps, it’s about making education more relevant and inclusive, giving young people a stronger connection to the place they live.

Designed for S5 and S6 students (aged 16–18), the programme connects school learning with hands-on training in local industries. Whether it’s maritime courses, NHS placements, or working alongside local trades, students are gaining skills that offer practical routes into work or study, in a rural island setting where opportunities can feel limited.


Unsung Hero

Lee Smith, Hethersett Academy, Norfolk

Lee Smith is a school site manager, whose compassion and consideration for others helped him literally save a life. When a vulnerable colleague didn’t show up to work one day, Lee followed his instincts and did a welfare check. After breaking down a front door, he found his colleague slipping into a diabetic coma. His quick thinking made all the difference, but the incident resulted in his colleague having to undergo an amputation.

Lee went on to help renovate the colleague’s home and garden to make it more accessible. He also bought a golf buggy and reshuffled responsibilities so his colleague could still stay involved in the school and return to work.

However for Lee, empathy isn’t a one-off act, but a way of life. Whether it’s building bird tables for terminally ill colleagues or finding the perfect spot to plant a memorial tree for the school’s pregnancy loss group, Lee has consistently demonstrated genuine selflessness, making him truly an unsung hero at Hethersett Academy.


Early Years Team of the Year

Best Family Childcare Nursery Early Years Team, West Yorkshire

Togetherness is central to Best Childcare Nursery. The early years team has devoted itself to creating a community where children and families feel a true sense of belonging. Open 51 weeks of the year, their ethos of “Rewilding Childhood,” inspired by the Reggio Emilia approach, celebrates children’s voices and nurtures wellbeing in a safe environment.

Traditions such as “Fika” create moments of sharing food and conversation, helping to foster connection across children, families and staff. Their Family Tree groups help siblings stay together, easing transitions and strengthening bonds.

With everything they do, the Best Childcare Nursery Early Years Team ensures that every child is supported not only to learn, but to grow into a confident, compassionate member of society.


Headteacher of the Year in Primary School

James Parkinson, De Lacy Primary School, West Yorkshire

When James Parkinson became headteacher of De Lacy Primary School, it was among the lowest-performing schools in the country.

Today under his leadership, De Lacy offers a varied curriculum incorporating unique initiatives to ‘future proof’ pupils and better equip them to cope with life in modern Britain. This incudes Future Fridays, where professionals inspire pupils with their career journeys, and 50 learning experiences which range from first aid, enterprise, and ecological projects, helping young students tick off valuable life experiences at an earlier age.

Known as a “deeply human” leader, James builds trust through genuine connections with children and families. Before James joined the school, it was once described to him as “a school you wouldn’t want to work in”. Now, that couldn’t be any further from the case. Today, De Lacy is judged Outstanding in every category by Ofsted, with outcomes placing it in the top 13 per cent nationally.


Making a Difference – Primary School of the Year

Sprites Primary Academy, Suffolk

Sprites Primary is living proof that with belief and compassion, every school and child can thrive. Once placed in special measures following two successive ‘inadequate’ Ofsted judgments, Sprites now stands as a beacon of excellence. 

Sprites’ vision is to provide the full curriculum so that every child can engage their interests, and the experiences offered by the school go way beyond the classroom. Children sing at the O2, camp under the stars, and walk the grounds of Cambridge University, often experiencing life beyond their neighbourhoods for the first time. The school has transformed old rooms into a Kids’ Kitchen, Live Lounge, and Art Studio to deliver a full, inspiring curriculum.

The school’s SEND provision, once heavily criticised, is a model of best practice, attracting families from across the region. Pupils with complex needs are not just supported but championed, such as Oscar, a pupil with ASD who with the right support became head boy and gained the opportunity to represent the trust at the House of Lords.


Secondary School of the Year

Moor End Academy, West Yorkshire

Moor End Academy is the definition of inclusivity, turning what could be a challenge of a highly diverse student body into a source of strength. With nearly 90 per cent of students from minority ethnic groups, many of whom do not have English as their first language, the school brings together young people from over 35 different linguistic and cultural backgrounds.

While this diversity could present barriers, Moor End has adapted by embedding language support across the curriculum, offering translators, tailored learning resources, and opportunities for students to share their own cultures, ensuring every child can participate fully and feel valued.

Student voice and leadership are at the heart of the school’s culture. From the student council, praised by Ofsted for genuinely making a difference to school life, to culture days where pupils showcase their heritage through food, music and traditions, students are empowered to take ownership of their community and learn from one another’s experiences.

The academy’s outreach extends beyond the school gates. Parents are welcomed in for family baking sessions, safeguarding workshops, and other opportunities to connect.


Teacher of the Year in a Primary School

Gosia Watts, Outwood Primary Academy Park Hill, West Yorkshire

Originally from Poland, Gosia began her life in the UK working in factories and offices before realising her dream of becoming a teacher. Now assistant principal at Outwood Primary Academy Park Hill, she draws on her passions for sustainability and the arts to shape a vibrant, inclusive education.

Gosia has created green spaces across the school, embedding sustainability into daily life. From the forest school to the sensory garden, her projects have provided calming, therapeutic environments that particularly support children with SEN.

Gosia champions the arts, directing Shakespeare productions and guiding whole-school creative projects – including one that saw her class’ artwork accepted into the National Gallery.

Gosia also works closely with the local community centre, leading events and celebrations, and has inspired families to join in initiatives such as the school pantry, where children and parents donate essential items to support others.


Teaching Assistant of The Year

Shagufta Mirza, Carlton Junior and Infant School, West Yorkshire

For more than 25 years, Shagufta Mirza has played a key part at Carlton Junior and Infant School, deeply invested in family and community wellbeing.

She leads the breakfast club, giving children a nourishing and positive start to the day. As a nurture lead and attendance officer, she works closely with families to remove barriers to education, always approaching issues with empathy and understanding. Beyond this, she organises parent workshops on wellbeing and resilience, helping families support both themselves and their children.

Shagufta is equally committed to broadening students’ horizons. From cultural visits to Amsterdam, to inspiring trips to Oxford University, to excursions to the Houses of Parliament, Shagufta has provided students with experiences that expand their understanding of the wider world.


Teacher of the Year in a Secondary School

Jolie Bartley, Varndean School, Brighton

Jolie Bartley has transformed drama into one of the most popular and successful subjects in Varndean School. She sees drama not just as a subject, but as a way to achieve greater inclusion, confidence and personal growth.

Her productions encourage anyone who wants to be involved to participate, while supporting performers with additional needs. This year’s cast included students who were partially sighted, autistic, and even one usually electively mute. Jolie is known for her unwavering care, whether stepping out of rehearsals to administer vital medication or patiently supporting a troubled Year 7 until he found his place within the group.

From Les Misérables to Little Shop of Horrors, each show involves more than 250 students across acting, music, choreography, stage management, lighting, sound, and make-up and costume. For Jolie, the true triumph lies not in the show itself but in the way it makes every student feels valued, regardless of their role.


Lifetime Achievement

Lynn Griffiths, Ysgol Gymraeg Caerffili, Wales

Lynn Griffiths is an inspirational educational leader who has dedicated his entire career to Ysgol Gyfun Caerffili. He has championed bilingualism through innovative language immersion techniques, ensuring hundreds of pupils leave as confident Welsh speakers.

Equally passionate about staff development, Lynn has created a culture of professional learning where teachers are supported and encouraged to progress in their careers.

Lynn’s work has been recognised regionally and nationally, with Estyn, EAS, and Welsh Government drawing on his expertise in leadership, language development, and professional learning. His influence extends far beyond the classroom, making him a transformative force in Welsh education.


Headteacher of the Year in a Secondary School

Lucy Harrison, Archer Academy, London

Lucy Harrison has transformed the Archer Academy into a thriving, inclusive community not just for students, but for staff too. During ten years of leadership, she has pioneered flexible working, staff wellbeing initiatives, and innovative approaches to teaching and learning.

As part of this, Lucy reshaped the school day significantly to improve engagement and behaviour. Through her consultation with staff, students and parents, a newly introduced timetable promotes consistency, reduces stress points, and maximises learning time. She complements these changes with a strong focus on student voice, creating leadership roles, societies and feedback forums that give young people a real say in their school experience.

By embedding careers education and extracurricular opportunities, Lucy ensures every young person leaves Archer with both outstanding qualifications and the skills to succeed in life.

Under Lucy’s guidance, Archer Academy continues to rank among the top schools nationally and is recognised as a model of best practice in wellbeing, inclusion and flexible working. Staff retention and morale are now among the highest in the borough, with surveys showing 96 per cent of colleagues are proud to work at Archer.

DfE’s £20m spike cash helps buy 9,000 student places

Emergency cash to cope with a teenage population spike will create around 9,000 extra college places across Leeds and Greater Manchester, it is forecast.

Both regions received £10 million each in post-16 capacity funding from the Department for Education, with Greater Manchester using the money to pay for a series of small expansions while Leeds City Council funded two new city centre buildings.

Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA), which added an extra £10 million of its own cash to address the 16-19 population bulge, estimates it can boost capacity by 5,315 extra places by September.

Its approach has been to lease and convert office buildings, remodel workshops for construction skills, fund refurbishments and recruit extra teachers.

The two main college groups in Leeds – Luminate and Leeds College of Building – have both bought buildings to create an extra 3,770 places.

The DfE’s capacity funding was announced in April. It is estimated that the number of teenagers aged from 16 to 18 surged by 230,000, or 13 per cent, between 2017 and 2024, and will rise by another 110,000 (5 per cent) to a peak in 2028.

FE Week understands enrolments across Greater Manchester increased from 28,670 in 2019-20 to 35,620 in 2023-24.

Speaking at the Association of Colleges conference last week, DfE director of labour market skills and funding Sinead O’Sullivan said “very little funding” was available for college capacity in 2025-26, so most of it was given to Leeds and Greater Manchester as they had “the most level of need”.

However, she noted “plenty of others” needed extra capital funding.

A further £375 million has been allocated for post-16 capacity until 2029-30, following the last capacity funding round that saw £230 million shared between 89 colleges and sixth forms.

The Manchester way

All nine FE colleges in Greater Manchester have been allocated a share of the region’s money, some of which was drawn from unspent “local growth funding” available to combined authorities.

Manchester College, which got the biggest share at £5.6 million, aims to create 345 new places by September by creating a new engineering workshop, remodelled construction spaces and science labs.

Wigan and Leigh College is expanding four of its sites to create 841 spaces by leasing two office buildings, upgrading its skills academy and enhancing its engineering and construction centre.

Tameside College expects to deliver an extra 1,116 places by refurbishing its existing building to add 11 new teaching spaces.

It will also recruit more teachers and support staff, and invest in IT hardware.

While the DfE funding pot is strictly for capital projects to create additional capacity, the extra £10 million GMCA provided was split, with £5 million used as a “top up” to the DfE’s capital funding and £5 million for “flexible” revenue and capital.

Revenue spending includes £395,000 set aside for college workforce development with qualifications for staff, informal CPD, engagement with employers and “market factor uplift supplements” for industry specialists from high-demand industries.

A recent report approving the overall spending package says funding is being prioritised to create places in priority “gateway sectors” such as construction and the green economy, and takes into account factors such as recent learner numbers, employer need and “reported over-subscription” for courses.

Initially, the region’s nine college groups asked for £19.2 million, but the total was brought down to £10 million after negotiations and a “proportionate reduction” to all bids.

Leeds goes big

Across the Pennines, Leeds City Council reports that Luminate is in the process of buying a 127-year lease of Livingstone House, a city centre six-storey office building by the River Aire, with its £8 million share.

The college group hopes it will become the base for Leeds City College’s school of health and social care, creating up to 1,500 extra educational places “across all vocational areas”.

However, until further funding is raised the five upper floors will be mothballed, chief executive Colin Booth told FE Week.

He said although the extra investment into post-16 capacity was “extremely welcome, we cannot afford to be complacent”.

He added: “Leeds City College has operated at maximum capacity for the last few years, with waiting lists for courses in areas like health and engineering.”

“Without sustained and targeted investment from government, increasing numbers of young people will be left without a suitable place to learn, in Leeds and across the country.”

Meanwhile, using its £2 million share, Leeds College of Building has bought a former Vodafone site next to its city centre campus.

The 5,000 square-metre building has a warehouse-like space on the ground floor and office space upstairs.

College CEO Nikki Davis told FE Week the building was “perfect”, would house about 2,000 learners as a “conservative” estimate, and aligned with plans to become a construction technical excellence college.

However, further funding will be needed to convert the building, meaning it is unlikely to be ready by September.

In a recent scrutiny report, Leeds City Council said it had already created an extra 975 places by the 2024-25 academic year by working with colleges and ITPs.

It estimates its numbers of 16 and 17-year-olds rose by more than 3,000 between 2021 and 2025.

The council added that its officials were working with colleges to make a “system-wide bid” to the DfE next year.

Reeves puts the ‘squeeze’ on big employers with budget levy tweaks 

Rachel Reeves’ tweaks to the apprenticeship levy funding system will “squeeze” large employers and risks “dampening appetite” for skills investment, business groups and experts have warned. 

The chancellor’s budget announced £725 million over the rest of this Parliament to be injected into the apprenticeship system, which will be reformed into a “growth and skills levy” from April. 

Some of the additional cash will fully fund apprenticeships for under-25s in small and medium-sized businesses, but most of the rest will ease pressure on England’s strained apprenticeship budget which was overspent for the first time last year. 

Reeves’ budget red book also revealed the government will remove a 10 per cent uplift for levy payers, halve the time levy payers have to use their levy funds from 24 to 12 months, and slash the co-investment rate offered to big businesses when they exhaust their funds to 75 per cent. 

Robert West, head of education and skills at the Confederation of British Industry, said there was “some concern” as the trio of changes for levy payers will “all put increased pressure on levy resources”. 

“Overall, this could mean lower government topping-up and faster recycling of unused funds back to the Treasury – all of which would reduce the overall pool available for training,” he told FE Week. 

Tom Richmond, an education policy analyst and former adviser to education ministers, said: “While pushing more money towards apprenticeships for young people will rightly steal the spotlight, some of the other changes look like a subtle way to put the squeeze on larger employers by reducing any cash piles sitting in their levy accounts.” 

He described the 10 per cent uplift for levy payers as a “weird feature” of the funding system that is “not worth mourning”. But “quietly reducing the co-investment rate to 75 per cent after a levy payer’s account has run dry looks like an attempt to stop larger employers hoovering up too much funding, while reducing the expiry window will heap more pressure on levy payers to get spending their contributions as quickly as possible – presumably in an attempt to prop up apprenticeship starts”. 

The changes will kick in from the 2026-27 academic year.

Treasury told FE Week that work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden would engage with businesses from December, and officials will set out further details “in due course”. 

Dampening appetite risk 

Since the apprenticeship levy was introduced in 2017, only large employers with a payroll in excess of £3 million have paid into the levy at a rate of 0.5 per cent of salary costs. 

The 10 per cent top-up has been a feature since the levy launched. It meant that if an employer paid £1 million into the levy they would have £1.1 million to spend on apprenticeship training. 

Currently, employers’ levy funds are removed from their digital accounts if they’re not spent within 24 months. This “use it or lose it” feature was designed to encourage levy-paying employers to invest in high-quality training and assessment and to prevent them from accruing overly large balances. 

The co-investment rate for levy payers if they spend all of their funds is understood to be 95 per cent currently. 

 Dale Walker, director of education at apprenticeships provider Apprentify, said the restrictions announced by Reeves could “dampen” the appetite for apprenticeships. 

He told FE Week: “A 12-month spending window is extremely tight when deploying levy funds with many large employers already taking more than a year to implement apprenticeship programmes.  

“Separately, increasing the employer contribution to 25 per cent [for the co-investment rate] and removing the 10 per cent top-up risks dampening appetite among levy-paying organisations already dealing with rising hiring, pension and tax costs.  

“My sense is that these changes may simply lead to more levy gifting and more unspent levy overall, rather than increasing meaningful investment in apprenticeships.” 

Hannah Larsen, policy officer at the British Chamber of Commerce, was particularly “disappointed that government is increasing costs for the trailblazing employers who exhaust their levy funds”. 

Growth and skills levy reform 

England’s apprenticeships budget was fully spent in recent years and the government plans to ease pressure by removing level 7 apprenticeships for people aged 22 and older from January. 

There will however be a short-term strain caused by a spike in level 7 starts, which are the most expensive to deliver, as employers rush to use the training route while they still can. 

The reformed growth and skills levy will also fund non-apprenticeship training from April.  

New apprenticeship “units” will be on offer, which could be courses as short as one week and are likely to be qualifications that exist within apprenticeship standards. 

The levy is generating more cash contributions than expected and is now estimated to raise £4.4 billion this year.  

England’s apprenticeship budget for 2025-26 is set at £3.075 billion, while the devolved nations receive just over £500 million. It means the top slice the Treasury takes between how much the levy generates and how much is dished out for apprenticeship spending hits around £820 million. 

Forecasts for 2026-27 show the levy intake will rise to £4.6 billion. If the Treasury fails to increase apprenticeship spending budgets the Treasury margin will hit £1 billion. 

The Office for Budget Responsibility expects the levy to raise £5 billion for the first time by 2029-30. 

Stephen Evans, chief executive of the Learning and Work Institute, said: “Extra funding for apprenticeships is welcome, though largely reflects an expected rise in the amount the levy raises meaning the Treasury will still be keeping a substantial sum. 

“At the same time, measures such as shortening the expiry time for levy funding are likely to reduce the amount of their levy that large firms spend, helping to tackle any pressures on the overall budget and pay for ending training costs for young apprentices in SMEs.”

Ben Rowland, CEO of the Association of Employment and Learning Providers, said the changes in this week’s budget “will feel like a squeeze for levy payers”.  

“Removing the 10 per cent top-up, shortening levy expiry to 12 months and tightening co-investment will inevitably drive different behaviours, and employers will now be even keener to see what they get back through the apprenticeship unit offer from April,” he added.  

“The move to fully fund under-25s for non-levy employers is positive and will strip out needless admin, but it also raises questions about how adults over 25 may be funded in future, particularly outside priority sectors.” 

Officials hesitate over V Level licence model

Ministers are still deciding whether V Levels will be developed under the same single-licence model as T Levels, a senior Department for Education official has revealed.

Speaking at the Federation of Awarding Bodies’ conference, DfE director of technical qualifications and essential skills Kiera Harper said her “personal view” was that licences for T Levels had been “incredibly challenging” to manage.

While the department is still “thinking about” what approach it will take with V Levels, it plans to have a single commercial strategy to cover both T Levels, V Levels and new level 2 qualifications “in the round”, Harper added.

Using a single awarding organisation per T Level was a recommendation by Lord Sainsbury in his review of technical education, which the DfE agreed to take forward. However, its own researchers warned that with no alternative to step in if problems arose with a contracted body, there was a “risk of system failure”.

V Levels, which will sit alongside A Levels and T Levels, were announced last month in response to the curriculum and assessment review’s findings, as a “vocational alternative” to the academic and technical route.

They will be aimed at students who have not made a decision on what career pathway they want to pursue.

Harper, who oversees the DfE’s level 3 reforms, including T Levels, said: “I think it’s important to recognise that with T Levels, the single licensing model came from a good place.

“It came from a desire to ensure quality, maintain grip and rigour for what was at the time an incredible – and is still arguably an incredibly – novel change to the way that we delivered qualifications in that space.”

‘Tell us how big’

The government wants students to be able to “mix and match” V Levels and A Levels, but is “absolutely open” to sector views on whether the new vocational qualifications should be “small” qualifications of 360 guided learning hours, or “medium-sized” at 725 hours, Harper added.

She told the conference that officials want parents and students at future open days to have a clear “narrative” about the purpose of the courses they are choosing.

She added: “If you can do that, and you can come up with a valid argument, we want to hear it.”

The government is currently consulting on its “post-16 level 3 and below” plans, which include V Levels, the expansion of T Levels, and widespread reforms to level 2 courses that will replace the T Level foundation year.

Rollout is planned across four years, with the first classes beginning in 2027.

Level 2 reform plans

Two level 2 pathways are being developed: one-year, 240 guided learning hours “foundation certificates” for students seeking to progress to a level 3 course, and two-year “occupational certificates” which aim to help students develop their technical knowledge in a classroom-based setting before moving into skilled employment.

The DfE wants to roll out V Levels and the new level 2 certificates together by “route”.

Ahead of the consultation closing on January 12, officials are working with awarding organisations and other stakeholders on “outline content” for each subject.

Officials aim to run a further consultation on each route’s exact content between April and June.