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2Regional Skills Policy and Sector Skills Councils
An LSC Viewpoint 19 October Chris Minett
Regional Skills Director
Welcome
3Sector Skills Councils
- Skills Strategy White Paper March 2005
- Skills are fundamental to achieving our
ambitions, as individuals, for our families and
for our communities. They help business create
wealth and they help people realise their
potential. - Employers will be given a strong voice in the
design and content of vocational qualifications
through Sector Skills Councils.
4Sector Skills Councils
- If training supply is to respond to employers
skills priorities, those priorities must be
clearly and consistently expressed. The main
mechanism for that is the Sector Skills Council.
5Learning and Skills Council Priorities
- The highest priorities for funding will be the
participation and success of young people aged 16
-18, alongside helping adults gain Skills for
Life qualifications and their first full - Level 2 qualification.
- We want more adults to gain their first full
Level 2 qualification to maximise both their
individual potential and their economic
contribution. More of the provision we fund must
deliver full Level 2 learning, particularly where
that responds to sector needs.
6Learning and Skills Council Priorities
- Government resources cannot fully meet the
increasing demand for learning. Consequently
public money must benefit those who need it most.
As individuals and employers benefit from skills
development it is reasonable they should
contribute a greater amount of the cost of
learning and, in some circumstances, the full
cost.
7Learning and Skills Council Priorities
- As employers benefit from skills investment we
expect them to contribute more to training costs
for workers, especially where the training is
highly customised or is required for legislative
purposes and is therefore the employers
responsibility.
8LSC Planning Priorities
- We want to continue changing the way learning is
delivered to better meet the needs of employers
and individuals. For employers, this means
increasing their choice of training that suits
their business requirements at the right time
and in the right place. - In local planning discussions with colleges and
providers, we will prioritise our investment in
learning and skills development that actively
meets the priorities identified in Sector Skills
Agreements.
9Business Cycle Key Processes
- October / November
- National LSC/DfES
- Grant Letter
- Budgets to Regions
- Regional LSC
- Agree priorities with Regional Partners
- Regional Statement of Priorities
- Regional consideration of budgets
- December / January
- Local LSC
- Indicative alloca-tions to providers
- Annual Planning Review in progress
- November
- Local LSC
- Identify key areas for dialogue with providers
- Strategic briefing of providers by ED
- Annual Planning Review with providers begins
- October
- National LSC
- LSC Annual Statement of Priorities
-
- Providers
- Self Assessment
- Local LSC
- Strategic Analysis
- Self Assessment
- April
- Allocations to providers confirmed
Ongoing Monitoringof Delivery
Evaluation of the Business Cycle
10LSC Response to Sector Skills Agreements
- The LSC will respond to the Sector Skills
Agreements tactically through - Solutions which will support purchasing via local
providers - Strategically on broader issues that need
resolution before any solution can be effective - Not all changes required by the Sector Skills
Agreement are needed or are deliverable in the
first year.
11LSC Data
- Health, Public Services and Care
- Science and Mathematics
- Agriculture, Horticulture and Animal Care
- Engineering and Manufacturing Technologies
- Construction, Planning and the Built Environment
- Information and Communication Technology
- Retail and Commercial Enterprise
- Leisure, Travel and Tourism
- Arts, Media and Publishing
12Potential Planning Changes
- Qualifications and provision that does not
support SSA priorities may not attract any LSC
funding or may attract less funding, and employer
fees will need to fill this gap. - Stop or reduces provision volumes in
qualifications currently being delivered that are
no longer identified as fit for purpose or
supported by the sector.
13Potential Planning Changes
- Expand provision volumes in priority areas to
prepare for forecast demand - Build capacity over a period of time to prepare
for or respond to new or priority qualifications
or provision - Align other funding to support capacity building
or other changes in support of the response to
the SSA
14- The regional skills partnership (SWESA) is
responsible for developing a partnership approach
to the SSAs - The National Employer Training Programme (NETP)
will be implemented nationally in 2006 and will
support employer choices in training with an
independent and impartial skills brokerage
service - Capacity building funds are available to support
NETP
15Challenges
- How do we ensure employers understand and agree
with Sector Skills Agreements? - Public funding is limited how do we encourage
employers to invest more in training their
employees? - 25 Sector Skills Councils with a wide variety of
demands how do we respond adequately to them
all? - How do we identify where public funding is needed
for level 3/4 training? - Aligning SSA planning cycles with the LSC
business plan.
16LSC Response to Sector Skills Agreements
- A stepped plan measurable over the relevant
timetable could be agreed and this would be
reflected in planning with providers. - The LSC cannot respond equally to all Sector
Skills Agreements and the response for each
agreement may vary, dependant upon local and
regional priorities.