The Daily Telegraph

Minister tears up 50pc target for university

Gavin Williamson tears up 50pc student target as he urges more youngsters to consider vocational courses

- By Camilla Turner EDUCATION EDITOR

Too many youngsters are going to university, the Education Secretary has said, as he ripped up the 50 per cent target. Gavin Williamson said that there are “limits” to what we can achieve by sending increasing numbers of school leavers into higher education, adding that it is “not always what the individual and nation needs”. School leavers should instead be urged to enrol in technical and further education colleges or apprentice­ships, he told the Social Market Foundation.

TOO many young people are going to university, the Education Secretary has claimed as he ripped up the 50 per cent student target.

Gavin Williamson said that there are “limits” to what we can achieve by sending increasing numbers of school leavers into higher education and that it is “not always what the individual and nation needs”.

In a virtual speech, hosted by the Social Market Foundation, he said some school leavers should be encouraged to enrol in technical and further educa- tion colleges or apprentice­ships.

“For too long we’ve been training people for jobs that don’t exist. We need to train them for the jobs that do exist and will exist in the future,” Mr Williamson said.

“We have to end the focus on qualificat­ions for qualificat­ions sake. We need fundamenta­l reform: a wholesale rebalancin­g towards further and technical education.”

The ambition for 50 per cent of school leavers to go to university was first introduced by Tony Blair in 1999, and has become de facto government policy ever since.

But Mr Williamson criticised the target, calling it an “absurd mantra”. He said: “From now on, our mantra must be further education, further education, further education.”

The proportion of young adults in England entering higher education rose above 50 per cent for the first time in 2017-18.

Figures published this week by Ucas, the university admissions service, show that the number of British school leavers applying to start degrees this autumn has surged to a record high despite uncertaint­y amid the pandemic.

Officials at the Department for Education highlighte­d figures that show a third of graduates end up in non-graduate jobs.

A report by the Institute of Fiscal

Studies found that almost eight in 10 graduates will never pay back their full student loan under the new tuition fees system. The number of graduates who fail to clear their debt before it is written off has almost doubled since 2011, when the Government axed the old maintenanc­e grants in favour of loans.

Mr Williamson told The Daily Telegraph that university is not the “silver bullet” for everyone, as he criticised people’s “snobbish” attitudes about further education.

“If you are a youngster and you are doing a two year decent quality app [apprentice­ship] you are going to be earning more than a graduate,” he said.

“We need to make sure we guide them to the right place to be able to add their skills so they can get a job. Sometimes that is going to be a degree but a lot of the time that is going to be through different routes.”

The Government will publish a White Paper this autumn which will outline plans to build a “German-style” further education system which will “level up skills and opportunit­ies” across the country.

David Hughes, chief executive of the Associatio­n of Colleges, agreed that it is time to “move on” from the 50 per cent target, which has now been achieved.

‘For too long we’ve been training people for jobs that don’t exist. We need to train them for ones that do exist’

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