working in partnership for a greater manchester

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Working in Partnership for a Greater Manchester North West Youth Employment Convention The Studio, Manchester 23 November 2011 Wendy Cooke Assistant Director (14 – 19) GM Skills and Employment Partnership

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Working in Partnership for a Greater Manchester North West Youth Employment Convention The Studio, Manchester 23 November 2011 Wendy Cooke Assistant Director (14 – 19) GM Skills and Employment Partnership. Working in Partnership for a Greater Manchester. Population of 2.6 million - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnershipfor a Greater Manchester

North West Youth Employment Convention

The Studio, Manchester

23 November 2011

Wendy CookeAssistant Director (14 – 19)

GM Skills and Employment Partnership

  

Page 2: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership for a Greater Manchester

• Population of 2.6 million

• Travel-to-work commuter population of 5 million

• April 2011: established as a ‘Combined Authority’

  

Page 3: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership for Young People

Policy context:

• Raising the Participation Age (RPA) to age 17 by 2013 and to age 18 by 2015

• Austerity measures mean reduced funding to local authorities, ‘providers’ and agencies supporting young people

  

Page 4: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership for Young People

Where we are now:

• c 75,000 young people aged 16 – 18 (post-compulsory education)

• c 89% in education, employment or training (EET)

• c 8% not in education, employment or training (NEET)

• c 3% ‘not known’

• variations between each local authority area

Note: ‘snapshot’ at May 2011 provided by GM Connexions Services

  

Page 5: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Where do young people aged 16 - 18 learn in Greater Manchester?

• In Colleges of Further Education (10) and Sixth Form Colleges (11) 71%

• In school sixth forms and academies (over 40 and growing!) 11%

• Through training providers for Apprenticeship provision 10% and other work-based learning 7% – 55 in the GM Learning Provider Network

• In Independent Specialist Colleges (for learners with learning difficulties/disabilities)

  

Page 6: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

What do young people aged 16 - 18 learn in Greater Manchester?

•52% study at Level 3 - A levels, applied and vocational qualifications

•24% study at Level 2 - equivalent to the normal school leaving benchmark of 5 GCSEs grade A* - C

•24% study at Level 1 or entry level - below the normal school leaving benchmark of 5 GCSEs grade A* - C

  

Page 7: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Implications of RPA

• Current education leaving age is 16, but most young people continue in learning until at least 17

• From 2013, all young people must continue in learning for a further full academic year, during which they will have their 17th birthday

• From 2015, all young people must continue in learning until (at least) their 18th birthday

  

Page 8: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Implications of RPAYoung people will not have to stay in school! Participation in learning can be:

• Studying in an FE or sixth form college

• Studying in a school with sixth form provision

• Being employed as an Apprentice

• Being employed and undertaking accredited learning for the equivalent of at least one day per week

  

Page 9: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Implications of RPAIssues to address:• Identifying young people at risk of NEET, pre and post-16

• Ensuring appropriate provision is in place for all young people, including Apprenticeships

• Addressing the specific needs of the most vulnerable and disadvantaged young people

• Tracking young people’s destinations

• Working with employers and other partners (parents!) to deliver RPA

  

Page 10: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Implications of RPAUnderstanding the impact of recent policy change:

• Changes to the delivery of information, advice and guidance and careers education from 2012

• Reductions in the amount of financial support available to disadvantaged young people in post-16 learning

• Increases in fees for Higher Education – up to £9,000 per year from 2012

• Ending of the Aimhigher programme which supported young people from families with no tradition of higher education

  

Page 11: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

The National Context:

• Youth (16 – 24) unemployment now over 1 million (c 45,000 in GM)

• Unrest in our major cities in August

• The emergence of a ‘feral underclass’?

• Or a lost generation?

  

Page 12: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

Agreeing priorities across the 10 areas:

• Increasing participation, particularly at age 17

• Developing provision which meets the needs of young people and the economy

• Developing Apprenticeship pathways

• Supporting our most vulnerable learners

• Raising achievement and progression to further learning/employment at age 18

• Reducing (eliminating?) NEET

  

Page 13: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

Establishment of a GM Skills and Employment Partnership to support:

• All GMCA areas in discharging their statutory duties with regard to 16 – 19 provision

• The Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) in delivering economic growth

• Schools, colleges and providers in shaping provision to meet economic needs

• The supply of labour market intelligence to inform learner choice

  

Page 14: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

SEN Pathfinder Status for GM

• Developing a more holistic approach to the education, health and care needs of our most vulnerable children and young people

• 20 bids approved out of 60 received from 99 LAs with PCT partners

• Led by Manchester, Oldham/Rochdale, Trafford and Wigan

• Commitment to share learning across all GM areas and beyond

  

Page 15: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

Helping us get there ….•Development of a GM Participation Framework:

- Working towards full participation in appropriate learning

- In anticipation of the national strategy

- Understanding the cohort – early intervention pre and post-16 to prevent NEET

- Developing appropriate provision

- Ensuring support is in place - eg age appropriate IAG

- Communicating with all partners

  

Page 16: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

Helping us get there ….

• Development of common ‘tools’ and goals such as:

- The GM Inspiring IAG award http://www.inspiringiag.co.uk/

- The GM Prospectus of post-16 learning www.mycoursemyfuture.com

- The CCIS ‘Hub’ – tracking across borders

- A ‘1 in 4’ Apprenticeship target

- The ‘Aspirational Futures’ project: developing capabilities for learning, living and work

- A combined budget for LLDD across GM (?)

  

Page 17: Working in Partnership for a  Greater Manchester

Working in Partnership in Greater Manchester

Thank you!