Title: A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE UKS NATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS FRAMEWORK
1A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE UKS NATIONAL
QUALIFICATIONS FRAMEWORK
Peter Clack Education Development Manager British
Council Istanbul Turkey peter.clack_at_britishcouncil
.org.tr www.britishcouncil.org.tr
2 THE ONLY CONSTANT IS CHANGE
3Skills for a global economy
- Workers must be equipped not simply with
technical - know-how but also with the ability to create,
analyse and - transform information and to interact effectively
with others. - Moreover that learning will increasingly be a
lifelong - learning activity
-
Alan Greenspan
4The National Qualifications Framework
Qualifications in England, Wales and Northern
Ireland fit into the National Qualifications
Framework (NQF). Revised NQF came into effect 1
September 2004 In Scotland there is the Scottish
Qualifications Framework. Vocationally-related
occupational qualifications are linked to
national occupational standards, which set out
real-world job skills defined by employers
5- The National Qualifications Framework
- Aims to
- widen participation and promote life-long
learning - clarify and smooth the relationship between
academic, vocational and general qualifications - facilitate the choice and combination of
qualification types and signposts clear
progression routes - provide a framework for quality assurance that
commands public and professional confidence.
6The National Qualifications Framework
7The National Qualifications Framework
8The National Qualifications Framework
9- The National Qualifications Framework
- Contains more than 4,000 qualifications - but to
meet the needs of employers and learners,
awarding bodies have developed a wide range of
popular awards outside of the framework. - Industry spends an estimated 23 billion on other
training provision that meets very specific
individual and local needs. - The National Qualifications Framework, while
representing a large portfolio of highly
respected qualifications, is not meeting the full
range of skills and learning needs.
10 11- The Skills Strategy
- On 9 July 2003 the Department for Education and
Skills launched its first ever Skills Strategy,
among its aims, the strategy intended to - Unitise qualifications and introduce a credit
system The Framework For Achievement - Give 14-19 year olds access to a range of
excellent academic and vocational education
courses - 14-19 Reform
12- THE FRAMEWORK FOR
- ACHIEVEMENT
13Framework for Achievement A consultation was
launched to explore proposals for a Framework for
Achievement on 29 November 2004. It will be
forward looking, encompassing a much wider range
of achievements and underpinned by a unit and
credit based system. It will be capable of
development over time to include all formally
assessed achievements outside the Framework for
Higher Education Qualifications.
14- Framework for Achievement
- The vision for the new Framework is that it will
support - systems to recognise learner achievements that
are - responsive to the needs of individuals and
employers -
- inclusive of a wide range of achievements
-
- clear and accessible to learners and providers
-
- cost effective to use and to manage
- valued by all users
- able to facilitate credit transfer
arrangements with European credit systems.
15Framework for Achievement Credit will be
awarded for completion of individual
units. Qualifications will then be built up by
combining and accumulating these units. All
units will be based on a standard format and many
units will be shared between different
qualifications. It will allow achievements
through work-based learning, e-learning,
employer training programmes and community-based
learning to be recognised.
16- Framework for Achievement
- It will continue to identify qualifications that
recognise occupational competence in a particular
job role. - These occupational qualifications will be
clearly linked to National Occupational
Standards. - Each unit will only be recognised for a specified
period of time to take account of rapidly
changing employment.
17 18 14-19 Reform
- All students should stay on through sixth form,
or take up a modern apprenticeship or job-related
training. In effect we want to make irrelevant
the school leaving age of 16. - Our goal is for every young person to succeed
which requires a new culture of personalised
learning in schools to develop talents of
students whatever their starting point or
aspiration. -
Prime Minister, Tony Blair 13th March 2004
19 14-19 Reform The Working Group on 14-19 Reform,
chaired by Sir Mike Tomlinson, published its
final report last October At the heart of its
report was the core principle of a single,
over-arching qualifications framework for both
academic and vocational courses. On 23 February
2005, the Department for Education and Skills
published the 14-19 Education and Skills White
Paper as a response.
20- 14-19 Reform
- While it accepts many recommendations, the
government is not adopting the proposals for an
overarching framework that combines all existing
qualifications. - It has proposed a separate framework for
vocational studies - to boost their status. -
- "For the first time we are going to take on and
tackle the intellectual snobbery which has
relegated vocational education to a second class,
second best education." - Education Secretary, Ruth Kelly
21- 14-19 Reform
- The proposals introduce new specialised lines of
learning leading to Diplomas in 14 broad sector
areas. - Employers, through Sector Skills Councils, will
lead in their design and higher education
institutions will also have an important role to
play. - The specialised Diplomas will replace the current
system of around 3,500 separate qualifications
and will provide an alternative gateway to higher
education and skilled employment.
22- KEY LESSONS LEARNT
- DURING ONGOING UK
- REFORM
23- The learner must benefit
- Government must be clear on its desired
outcomes - There must be clear functions for all the bodies
involved - There is no single solution to tackling the
skills agenda - Whatever is put in place must be able to change
- Partnership between all stakeholders is
essential
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