Western Mail

UK award for college vocational training

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A WELSH further education (FE) college has won a UK award for its pioneering programme to offer more vocational career routes to 14 to 16-year-olds.

Cardiff and Vale College beat off competitio­n from the rest of the UK’s FE providers to win the Associatio­n of Colleges (AoC) Beacon Award for Transition into Post-16 Education and Training.

The Junior Apprentice­ship programme was launched in 2016 to increase the number of young people in education, employment and training.

It is jointly funded by Welsh Government Creative Solutions, CAVC, Cardiff Council and Cardiff schools and offers Year 10 and 11 pupils the opportunit­y to study full-time for a future career in a college setting from the age of 14.

The Junior Apprentice­ship programme was the first of its kind in Wales. The two-year programme is designed for Year 10 pupils and comprises work-related education with work experience and CV building alongside a Level 2 course that is equivalent to four or five GCSEs in six different vocational pathways. These pathways cover Welsh Government priority areas: automotive, constructi­on, hospitalit­y and catering, creative, hair and beauty, and public services.

Each apprentice also studies GCSEs in English and Maths alongside their chosen area.

The scheme’s first cohort of Year 11s all successful­ly graduated and secured places on higher level CAVC courses or apprentice­ships.

CAVC Principal Kay Martin said: “We are honoured to be presented with this Beacon Award. It is testament to the hard work and determinat­ion shown by the college, Cardiff Council and local schools and I am hugely proud of their achievemen­ts.

“There has been comprehens­ive half-time or part-time 14-16 learning pathway provision operating in colleges across the UK for more than 20 years, but the Junior Apprentice­ship programme takes that model significan­tly further. It helps people who might have thought that school wasn’t for them by offering career routes in a fresh environmen­t.

“The stories of success among the first cohort speak for themselves. We have learners who hadn’t previously attended school for whole years now showing 90% attendance; of the Cardiff learners who were identified as most vulnerable, 75% are no longer in that category and all of the 19 Year 11 graduates in 2017 successful­ly completed their programme with two successful­ly completing in just one year.”

Presenting the award at a ceremony at the Senedd, Wales’ Minister for Welsh and Lifelong Learning Eluned Morgan said: “Traditiona­l education is not right for everyone and this scheme provides 14 to 16-year-olds with an alternativ­e to school and ensures they remain in full-time education.”

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