The Mail on Sunday

As Education Secretary Gillian Keegan launches new apprentice­ships to get more people into teaching, she says... My message to the Oxbridge snobs? I’ve been patronised by much better people than you

- By ANNA MIKHAILOVA DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

GILLIAN KEEGAN has a stock comeback for Oxbridge-educated politician­s and civil servants who dare talk down to her: ‘You know, I have been patronised by much better people than you.’

‘It takes them a while normally to figure that out,’ she says with a wry smile, sitting in her Chichester constituen­cy.

As the only Cabinet Minister with a degree apprentice­ship, Mrs Keegan has had to fight her corner to get her ideas heard – even in her current job as Education Secretary.

Today she is opening up the routes in which people can become teachers and allowing them to work and be paid from day one, while studying. She is launching a new teaching degree apprentice­ship, in which trainees will spend about 40 per cent of their time learning with an accredited provider, with their tuition paid for. It is first aimed at maths teachers but will then be opened up to other subjects.

Mrs Keegan battled to get the policy through – facing down Whitehall officials who didn’t understand why including the ‘degree’ element made a difference.

It illustrate­s the danger of having just Oxbridge graduates around the table, she says. ‘You need diversity. Nobody else would have been able to say “no, no, it’s not sensible to get to take the degree out of degree apprentice­ships”. I knew instinctiv­ely because I’d done one.’ Having grown up in Knowsley, Merseyside, Mrs Keegan left her state school at 16 to work in a car factory – while also studying for a three-year degree apprentice­ship.

‘I feel really proud of being an apprentice. You can get to exactly the same place in life via a different route.’

As a woman who had not gone to university, working in business in the 1980s and 1990s was no easy feat. She describes facing ‘incredible’ levels of sexism while leading a project for NatWest in Japan. ‘They wouldn’t even look at me’ during meetings, she says – and spoke only to her male junior colleagues.

Mrs Keegan then learned all the numbers in Japanese so she could follow what her counterpar­ts were saying to each other during negotiatio­ns – while they thought she couldn’t understand them.

To emphasise the point, she rolls out a few Japanese phrases during our interview. ‘It took me about a year and a lot of karaoke before they would accept me in the role,’ she says, adding: ‘I’ve always preferred to be underestim­ated than overestima­ted.

‘Coming from Liverpool, you don’t tend to grow up being praised for everything, you get on with it. There’s no way that people should be defined in terms of their education,’ Mrs Keegan says, perhaps counterint­uitively for someone running the Department for Education – but she sees degree apprentice­ships as a way to unlock opportunit­ies for people who may not have had them early on.

She is known for her plain-speaking approach. She hit headlines last year after being recorded at the end of an interview saying: ‘Does anyone ever say, “you know what, you’ve done a f ****** good job because everyone else has sat on their a*** and done nothing”?’

She and her husband Michael have been in the spotlight recently following the Post Office scandal – he was Fujitsu’s UK chief executive between May 2014 and June 2015.

Last month he stepped down from his part-time Cabinet Office role. Mrs Keegan said he will ‘absolutely 100 per cent’ give evidence to the inquiry if it asks him to.

For now, her focus is to ‘broaden the pipeline of people who go into teaching’.

As for those pesky Oxbridge graduates who dare talk down to her, Mrs Keegan points out that many of them have ended up working for her – not the other way round.

 ?? ?? TRAILBLAZE­R: Mrs Keegan is the only Cabinet Minister with a degree apprentice­ship
TRAILBLAZE­R: Mrs Keegan is the only Cabinet Minister with a degree apprentice­ship
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