If you’ve ever delivered the level 3 award in education and training (AET), you’ll know one thing straight away: no two learners are the same.
Some walk in with years of experience. They’ve already been training colleagues, running sessions, or mentoring staff. Others are completely new and need time to build confidence just to stand up and speak.
Both can become great teachers. But they don’t get there in the same way, or in the same time.
That’s where guided learning hours (GLH) start to feel out of touch.
GLH is meant to give structure. It tells awarding organisations and providers roughly how big a qualification is and how long it should take. In theory, that sounds reasonable. In practice, it assumes that learning is predictable.
It isn’t.
Anyone who’s spent time in a classroom will recognise that learning is far messier than that. The American educational theorist David Allen Kolb talked about learning as a cycle – doing something, reflecting on it, improving, then trying again. Some learners move through that quickly, others need time to process and build confidence. There isn’t a fixed pace.
The same applies when you look at Russian theorist Lev Vygotsky’s idea of needing the right level of support to move forward. Some learners just need a light touch, others need more guidance. That support changes the time it takes to learn.
And when you’re working with adults, American theorist Malcolm Knowles’s view is even more relevant. Adults bring experience, want learning to feel useful, and often take ownership of how they develop. That doesn’t sit comfortably with a system that assumes everyone needs the same number of hours.
You see all of this play out when delivering the AET.
Some learners grasp planning and delivery quickly. Their micro-teach is strong from the start. Others need a few attempts, not because they’re not capable, but because teaching is a skill that develops through doing it, getting feedback, and trying again.
That’s the whole point of the course.
But GLH doesn’t really allow for that difference. It quietly assumes everyone is moving at the same pace, which just isn’t the reality.
The bigger issue is how it’s used.
In some cases, there’s a heavy focus from awarding organisations on making sure learners complete a set number of hours. It becomes about ticking off time rather than asking a much more important question: can this person actually teach?
That shift matters. Because once you start prioritising hours, the learning experience changes. You end up shaping delivery around the clock rather than around the learner. People who could move faster are held back. People who need more time can feel like they’re falling behind.
Neither situation reflects what good training should look like.
It becomes even more obvious when you look at how people learn now.
A lot of development doesn’t happen in a classroom or a live session. Learners read articles, watch videos, join webinars, and talk to other professionals. The most valuable learning comes from those moments where something clicks after a conversation or a bit of reflection.
The problem is, none of that fits neatly into GLH.
How do you track the time someone spends reading a journal? Or having a discussion with another trainer online? You can’t, at least not in any meaningful way. So it often gets ignored, even though it’s a big part of how people actually develop.
That’s where the system starts to feel disconnected from reality.
The AET in particular is meant to be about the individual. It’s about helping someone find their own way of teaching, building confidence, and developing real skills they can use in front of a group.
It’s not about completing a set number of hours.
GLH still has a place. It helps give a rough structure and stops qualifications from becoming too loose. But it should be treated as a guide, not a rulebook.
What matters more is whether the learner can do the job at the end of it.
In FE, we talk a lot about learner-centred approaches. The AET is one of the clearest examples of where that should apply. If the focus shifts too far towards hours and away from outcomes, we risk losing what the qualification is actually there to do.
And that’s develop confident, capable teachers.
Because in the end, no learner remembers how many hours they spent on a course. They remember whether they felt ready to stand up and teach.