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	<title>Careers education, information, advice &amp; guidance Archives - Johnny Rich</title>
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		<title>My imaginary university</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Feb 2024 22:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fair access]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HE policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social mobility]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=1321</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>I felt (quite literally) honoured recently to receive an invitation from the man who puts the ‘great’ into Paul Greatrix – none other than the Registrar of the University of Nottingham, the blogger, the podcaster and the chronicler of all things higher education.&#160; He asked me to appear on his podcast&#160;My Imaginary University. If you’re not familiar with it (where have you been?), this is the closest thing the HE sector has to&#160;Desert Island Discs. It’s a ingeniously simple format in which Paul interviews someone, invites them to make some seemingly fantastical choices and, in the process, of course, they reveal as much about themselves</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/">My imaginary university</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='My imaginary university' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><em><strong>I felt (quite literally) honoured recently to receive an invitation from the man who puts the ‘great’ into Paul Greatrix – none other than the Registrar of the University of Nottingham, the blogger, the podcaster and the chronicler of all things higher education.&nbsp;</strong></em></p>



<p><em><strong>He asked me to appear on his podcast&nbsp;</strong></em><a href="https://wonderfulhighered.com/2024/02/20/my-imaginary-university-episode-16-camford-university/"><strong>My Imaginary University</strong></a><em><strong>.</strong></em></p>



<p>If you’re not familiar with it (where have you been?), this is the closest thing the HE sector has to&nbsp;<em>Desert Island Discs</em>. It’s a ingeniously simple format in which Paul interviews someone, invites them to make some seemingly fantastical choices and, in the process, of course, they reveal as much about themselves as they do about the choices they’ve made.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Rather than picking eight tracks, a book and a luxury, in <em>My Imaginary University</em> the interviewee conjures their fantasy institution using a series of prompt question that Paul emailed me in advance. </p>



<p>At the start of each show, he explains that he hasn’t a clue what’s coming and, to my surprise, this was literally true. You have to hand it to him: he’s a class act. He conducted the interview slickly, probingly, and genuinely without notice or notes.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<p>I, on the other hand, did need notes. And I thought, with Paul’s permission, I might share his advance questions with you – as well as some of my own prompts to myself –&nbsp;and the notes that I made since, inevitably, not everything I had thought about made it out of my mouth and into the show. I do hope you’ll also&nbsp;<a href="https://wonderfulhighered.com/2024/02/20/my-imaginary-university-episode-16-camford-university/">listen to the podcast</a>&nbsp;itself and subscribe (because there are some excellent previous episode by far more worthy and knowledgeable guests than me).</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<p><strong>Q: Tell us about your history. Where does your university sit? Are you ancient? Redbrick, plate glass? Post-92? A new challenger?&nbsp;</strong></p>



<p>I decided to make life easy for myself with my imaginary university, by choosing the well-established and highly prestigious Camford University, which I was delighted to be appointed to lead an unspecified number of years ago. And when I was appointed I was really clear that I wanted to radically change the university so that it meets the priorities of today rather than merely the rather narrow sector of society that it has served so brilliantly for centuries.</p>



<p><strong>Q: Your location: are you a campus uni? Urban? Rural? And what is your specific location? Are you even in the UK or are you perhaps a tiny liberal arts college in New England? Or even a thrusting start-up in Asia.</strong></p>



<p>As you know, Camford is one of the nation’s great and ancient universities, but unlike Oxford and Cambridge, it isn’t in the wealthy southern half of the country. The city of Camford has largely built up around the university over the centuries, but the surrounding region is basically post-industrial and, while traditionally we’ve welcomed some extremely well-heeled students, within 30 miles of the university there some of the country’s most deprived areas.&nbsp;</p>



<p>So, we’re keeping many of the features that make Camford such a special institution, but we’re turning it into a powerhouse of opportunity for all and a central driver for regional revival.&nbsp;</p>



<p>There are three parts to this: <strong>who studies here</strong>, <strong>the student experience</strong>, and <strong>the relationship with the local community and businesses</strong>.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Who studies at your university?</strong></p>



<p>Our access policy is based on potential not attainment. Our admissions policy is based entirely on contextualised offers, with a preference for students from within the region.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We’re investing heavily in our outreach team and teaming up with some of the excellent third sector organisations working in access. We’re building up these long-term relationships with schools and colleges in the region to play a part in raising attainment, but also to help us recognise which pupils they have who would flourish in the environment we can provide, if only they had the chance.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We organise teaching days at the university for students from those schools and we bus them in. When they apply here, we send admission staff to them to do what we call ‘interviews’. The point of the interviews though is not solely about us selecting them or them selecting us, it’s about working out with them how best to support their idea of success in life.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The aim of these – and our whole admissions process – is to search for evidence of the potential to succeed rather than seeing if they can navigate a filtering process that’s designed to exclude. We try to ensure that, even if we can’t accept everyone, we always help them to hone their understanding of what would be the best match for them and also improve their self-presentation.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Being the best match is really important to us and some of our genius academics from our AI research centre have developed this incredible software that hunts for signals about what kinds of people are most likely to pass various milestones on the path to a good outcome. This is heavily based on comparisons with control data about people with similar backgrounds: we’re not looking to find the people most likely to ‘succeed’ – because that’s likely to be the people with the biggest head start – but rather the people who will go on the longest journey, the people where the kind of education we can offer will add the most value and be most transformative.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We could take the easy path and simply admit demonstrably brilliant students with loads of social capital, stamp them with a Camford-approved label and send them out into the world. That’s what we’ve been doing for centuries and, to be honest, it’s hard to say that we changed the course of those graduates’ lives greatly. So we’re not doing that any more. Instead, we’re looking at the taxpayers’ investment in higher education and we’re sweating it to maximise the return. Meanwhile we’re doing the same for our students so that their effort and investment gets them the biggest possible return.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Those returns, by the way, aren’t always financial. Thanks to Camford’s reputation, our graduates do tend to be higher earning on average, but we’ve also seen that our approach tends to turn out graduates who’re very focused on the communities they came from, on lifting others up and on creating things rather than pursuing extrinsic markers of ‘success’. We’re trying to make sure that social mobility in a deprived region doesn’t have to mean geographic mobility.</p>



<p><strong>Q: Tell me about your foundation years</strong></p>



<p>We extended our foundation year programme accordingly and, while most of these courses are integrated into a full degree programme, we’ve also been building up strong partnerships with other universities in the UK and around the world to channel students wherever they feel they’ll be best suited. We’re finding, however, that most do want to stay.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Are there any novel aspects of the student experience your new recruits should expect?</strong></p>



<p>Our education is radically holistic. On the one hand, you could say it’s based on what makes our graduates employable, but it’s about a lot more than that. It’s about producing rounded people.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Employability is made up of various ingredients:&nbsp;</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Firstly, there are skills, both transferable, so-called ‘soft’ skills and more job-specific skills;&nbsp;</li>



<li>Then there’s knowledge;&nbsp;</li>



<li>Thirdly, there are more character-driven attributes, such as attitudes, values, behaviours and even personality;&nbsp;</li>
</ul>



<p>There’s a fourth ingredient that I’ll talk about in a moment. But those first three are what our education is designed to develop. You might call it &#8217;employability&#8217;, but back in the 1990s, people used to talk about ‘graduateness’ and it was the same idea. At Camford, we call it &#8217;roundedness&#8217; and we talk about having a unique individual ‘mix’ of these ingredients.</p>



<p>Becoming rounded is something that students hear about from day one… and <em>before</em>. It’s built into everything we say about our courses and the student experience. It runs through our partnerships with schools. We talk about it in interviews as a way of getting applicants to think about whether this is what they want and expect from their student experience.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Students do self-reflections and appraise themselves at key points to understand what skills, knowledge and attributes they have in their unique mix. Academics are explicit about what different course components are intended to add to students’ mix and students complete reflections afterwards to see if their mix has developed in the way they – and the academics – had hoped and expected.&nbsp;</p>



<p>This kind of self-appraisal is as important to academic progress as any summative assessments. We do have some exams, but we also have assessment through extended essays, presentations and projects. We have lots of project-based learning, often in teams. These teams are almost always interdisciplinary. As often as we can, they’re driven by practical, real world examples, providing free solutions to business challenges faced by employers, mostly from the region, but sometimes all over the world. They’re assessed by a mix of the external ‘customer’, the academic who facilitates the scheme, and peer assessments by the team.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Students are also really encouraged to engage in activities that elsewhere would be beyond their studies, but at Camford, through reflection, if you can demonstrate you’ve added to your mix, you can gain credits. So, activities like social action in the community, student representation, sports, even a part-time job can all contribute to academic credits. But you’ve got to be able to demonstrate relevant learning.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Whenever we can, the university either employs students or sets them projects that support the running of the university. For example, our timetabling every year is a major project undertaken by an interdisciplinary team. And students do most of the work planning and running open days, graduation etc.&nbsp;</p>



<p>This really helps solve some of the conflicts for students, especially our students from disadvantaged background who might otherwise feel there’s a trade-off between their work, their need to earn money and wanting to make the most of the opportunities of student life.&nbsp;</p>



<p>I mentioned that there’s a fourth ingredient to employability. That’s social capital, which is often less fair or meritocratic, but we can’t ignore it. Through our fantastic alumni network and the relationships we’re building in employers, we encourage our students to build the connections that help make up for not necessarily having the old school tie networks that Camford used to rely on.</p>



<p><strong>Q: You described the university as a regional hub. Tell me more about what that means.</strong></p>



<p>I’ve already mentioned the way we are partnering with local schools and colleges and the relationships with businesses in project-based learning. In everything we do, as far as possible, the relationship between town and gown – or more particularly county and gown – is less of a divide and more like a constant thoroughfare.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We have a lot of visiting professors from local businesses and from the public sector in the region. We also regularly do placements or secondment of academics into businesses to help them with specific challenges. There are lots of labour market gaps in the region and we helps to fill those in a flexible way that helps everyone.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We are of course also one of the great global research institutions and so we can attract funding from all over the world to our corner of the UK. We have specialist research centres in pataphysical genomics and quantum psychology&nbsp;– both very innovative and successful.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We have a special alumni-backed venture capital fund for research-based spin-outs that set up in the region.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: What&#8217;s in your prospectus and and what are some of the more interesting courses you might offer</strong>?</p>



<p>Obviously, we’re very lucky that our prospectus and website can show off lots of beautiful pictures of our stunning architecture, but the key messages are about our openness. There are no minimum requirements for any course at Camford, except being able to show the potential to thrive in our environment.</p>



<p>The prospectus also explains our philosophy of roundedness and the huge range of opportunities every student has to develop it. It explains about interdisciplinary ways of working, so may find themselves working on a project with others doing engineering, English, sociology or psychology. We have a fairly traditional and recognisable range of courses, but we do also offer an Interdisciplinary Degree where you can move around different courses and non-course activities collecting credits.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Where do you sit in the rankings and what you are going to do about it or perhaps you don&#8217;t care?</strong></p>



<p>Traditionally, Camford has always done very well in the rankings and when I was appointed I was very clear that we might slip with our new approach, but that it was never going to be a metric for us. </p>



<p>We don’t co-operate with any rankings and we actively use our position to speak out against their misleading and heuristic approach. The fact is that if a university like Camford starts to slide down in a ranking, it will undermine the ranking more than it undermines us. So I think it’s really important that institutions like ours use our position of privilege.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<p>I’m very fortunate that my governing body are 100% bought in to this approach.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: What kind of VC are you in this university?</strong></p>



<p>My main role is to help keep all my brilliant team together and heading in the same direction. There are always practical challenges, brickbats, and people who don’t get it. It’s my job to take any flak and turn it around by going out and spelling out our vision. I’m the one responsible for helping everyone else stick to our sense of purpose.&nbsp;</p>



<p>Of course, that means I’m often a spokesperson, a negotiator or a motivator. Most importantly, it’s my role to bring in brilliant people who share the vision.&nbsp;For me VC stands for &#8216;Vision Captain&#8217; at least as much as &#8216;Vice Chancellor&#8217;.</p>



<p>We have a proctor who is our academic lead and a chief executive who manages the operations side.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: What about the students&#8217; union?</strong></p>



<p>The relationship is so close sometimes it doesn’t feel like the SU is all that separate from the university. As I mentioned, students are employed or involved wherever and whenever possible. Student reps sit on all committees and are partners in designing courses. If we have a major build project, students often represent the university in meetings with architects or contractors. They often earn both money and course credits doing this work.</p>



<p><strong>Q: What is the regulatory regime? Do you even care?</strong></p>



<p>We work quite closely and amicably with the OfS. The advantage of being a university like Camford is that we can have quite a lot of sway with the regulator and support them in being better at their job.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Do you have a voice on the national stage? Do you have politicians queuing up to speak or open new labs?</strong></p>



<p>We’re in the powerful position of having excellent relationships with politicians and civil servants because, of course, many of them are Camford alumni themselves. That’s a privilege that we use to support colleagues across the sector. We’re trying to offer something unique here that&#8217;s appropriate for where we are and who we serve, but we fully recognise that diversity is a key strength of the sector.</p>



<p><strong>Q: Are there any other distinctive features we need to know about your imaginary uni? You might have a great sports team, a notable Chancellor, your own brand of gin or a colourful mascot.</strong></p>



<p>We’ve got many ancient buildings, including the largest castle hall in England – where we stage graduation ceremonies. And being ancient most of our buildings are haunted. In fact, Camford boasts the most haunted university building in the world, which now houses our Centre for Rational Research which debunks superstitious nonsense like the idea of ghosts. In recent years though it’s also become a really important centre for investigating and disproving conspiracy theories. Trump absolutely hates it.&nbsp;</p>



<p>We’ve got other unique research centres in cutting edge areas, some of which are a little way from the rest of the university. For example the Pataphysical Genomics centre took over the buildings of an old Tate and Lyle factory and is creating new jobs in what had become a run-down small town.</p>



<p>The Chancellor is a student elected by both the students and staff.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Given that it&#8217;s an imaginary university, what are you not allowing?</strong></p>



<p>We’re not in the habit of banning anything that’s within the law and we certainly don’t believe we should treat students like children. Instead we try to give them responsibility and support. That said, we do strongly discourage fixed mindsets. If something seems too difficult, it’s about turning to others for help to learn how to do it.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Q: Finally, and this is a compulsory question, we need to know what your university song would be?</strong></p>



<p>It was ‘I vow to thee my country’, but we put it to the students and staff and they voted for ‘change’, literally. So now it’s ‘Change’ by Taylor Swift from the <em>Fearless</em> album, which seemed appropriate enough. Personally I voted for &#8216;Heroes&#8217; by David Bowie, partly because that also seemed appropriate, but also because it’s just about the best song ever written and I thought if I’ve got to listen to it endlessly, I’d rather it’s not something I get bored of.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<p><em>Thanks again to Paul Greatrix (and Sophie Marshall). Do read his blog at <a href="https://wonderfulhighered.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Wonderful Higher Ed</a>, where you can not only find links to the <a href="https://wonderfulhighered.com/2024/02/20/my-imaginary-university-episode-16-camford-university/">My Imaginary University podcast</a>, but also to his other podcasts and blogs about True Crime on Campus, wacky rankings, and all manner of wonderful and occasionally important HE matters. </em></p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='My imaginary university' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='My imaginary university' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/my-imaginary-university/">My imaginary university</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>T Levels: what&#8217;s the win for employers?</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/</link>
					<comments>https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Feb 2023 15:25:55 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Employability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Skills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Student choice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[btecs]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[employers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Qualifications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[T levels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vocational]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=1277</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Last week, the DfE announced that it was setting up a £12 million fund to encourage employers to offer work experience for T levels. Good news, right? Well, partly. If T Levels are ever going to be a mainstream success as a vocational qualification, they are going to need a lot more employer engagement. I mean a lot. When you have a bold and ambitious policy, you don&#8217;t get it to fly by giving it half a feather instead of a full set of wings</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/">T Levels: what&#8217;s the win for employers?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p class="js-tweet-text tweet-text with-linebreaks " lang="en"><em><strong>Last week, the DfE announced that it was setting up <a href="https://feweek.co.uk/dfe-announces-new-12m-t-level-employer-placement-fund/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">a £12 million fund</a> to encourage employers to offer work experience for T levels. Good news, right? Well, partly.</strong></em></p>
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<p class="js-tweet-text tweet-text txt-size-variable--18 margin-b--10 with-linebreaks padding-t--10" lang="en">If T Levels are ever going to be a mainstream success as a vocational qualification, they are going to need a lot more employer engagement. I mean <strong>a lot</strong>.</p>
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<p><span style="font-size: revert;">Let&#8217;s crunch some numbers. In each cohort of just under 1.5 million 16-year olds, the choices are A levels, BTECs or apprenticeships (accounting for about half the cohort between them), jobs, unemployment or &#8216;other&#8217;.&nbsp;</span><span style="font-size: revert;">For T levels to grow to even a quarter of those in education or training and, let&#8217;s say, a tenth of the rest would mean nearly 275,000 T level work experience opportunities per year. Are there really that placements many out there to be had?&nbsp;</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">Each T Level requires 45 days of work experience. For 275,000 T levels, that equates to just under 100 million hours.&nbsp;</span><span style="font-size: revert;">Let&#8217;s suppose each placement takes just one hour of administrative work to arrange and each experience hour that they provide takes up just 10 minutes of oversight by a paid employee. I suspect both those estimates are generously on the low side, but even that is nearly 17 million hours of employer time.</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">At a median hourly rate of £18.50 for those employees doing the administration or oversight (again, I&#8217;m being generous), that&#8217;s well over £300 million of direct cost to the employers. That&#8217;s before you account for any of the other costs in providing work experience (the space, utilities, equipment, insurance, etc).</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">A fund of £12Mn looks pretty paltry by comparison.</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">But let us not be churlish. It&#8217;s better than nothing and presumably the DfE hopes the £12Mn will help to fund tens of thousands T levels next year, not yet the hundreds of thousands which it may hope may be realised in the future. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: revert;">Besides,&nbsp;</span><span style="font-size: revert;">it&#8217;s not as if employers engage in T levels to add to their bottom line anyway. This is an investment in the future of their workforce, creating a skills pipeline and contributing to wider society, surely?</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">So let&#8217;s think like a business. How else could they invest and achieve a similar outcome? Well, instead of the new-fangled T levels that as yet have no track record, one alternative for an employer would be to offer apprenticeships to young people instead.</span></p>



<p><span style="font-size: revert;">Would it be cheaper and more cost effective for the employer?</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: revert;">Cheaper? Yes. Larger employers can offset the cost of apprenticeships against their levy. Smaller employers can claim (most of) the cost back.</span></p>



<p>More cost effective? Probably. Apprentices are employees whereas T level students aren&#8217;t. That gives employers have more control over what they can expect from apprentices&#8217; productivity. And when they finish their apprenticeship, the employer can chose to (continue to) employ them, rather than, with T level students, hoping that, when they finish, they apply for a job with them rather than perhaps with their competitor, going to uni or doing something else.</p>



<p>If an employer is looking to invest in their future skills pipeline, they may well decide apprenticeships are a more attractive option than engaging in T levels and even the prospect of a share of a £12 million fund doesn&#8217;t come close to tipping that calculation.</p>



<p><span class="css-901oao css-16my406 r-poiln3 r-bcqeeo r-qvutc0">That is perhaps why when the DfE tried setting up a similar fund in 2019, <a href="https://feweek.co.uk/huge-t-level-employer-cash-incentive-underspend-revealed/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">they managed to allocate only £500k out of a total available of £7Mn</a>, funding about 2.5% of the intended number of T level placements.</span></p>



<p>The £1,000 per placement incentive simply didn&#8217;t sweeten the deal sufficiently. Even <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/employer-pulse-survey-2021" target="_blank" rel="noopener">DfE&#8217;s own research</a> told them as much: just 7% of employers said it would make a difference. (My back-of-an-envelope calculation above of £300 million costs for 275,000 placements – which works out at an optimistic £1,090 each – perhaps explains why.)</p>



<p>If at first you don&#8217;t succeed&#8230; right?</p>
<p>Or there is another way of looking at it: the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>When you have a bold and ambitious policy, you don&#8217;t get it to fly by giving it half a feather instead of a full set of wings</p>
</blockquote>



<p>This may all sound like nay-saying about T levels as if I don&#8217;t approve of the concept. Nothing could be further from the truth. I would love to see them succeed. The problem is that when you have a bold and ambitious policy, you don&#8217;t get it to fly by giving it half a feather instead of a full set of wings.</p>



<p>Rather than recognising that a change this big needs real investment of money and effort – especially to overcome the real challenges of delivering T levels at scale at a regional level – <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">the Government&#8217;s approach appears to be to defund other options</a>, even when its own targets for T level expansion won&#8217;t replace what&#8217;s being lost.</p>



<p>Realistically, T levels won&#8217;t ever be the vocational silver bullet qualification that the Government longs for. The problems of employer engagement and regional disparities in provision can be tackled, but never fully overcome, and the fact will remain that for some young people, commitment to a single T level at 16 will simply be less suitable than a mix of BTECs or other options (which usually require a less academic approach to learning and can help a young people keep their options open for longer).&nbsp;</p>



<p>I do hope, however, that T levels find a place in the choice of provision and do not suffer the fate of so many of the other well-intentioned efforts to create new vocational qualifications. The only vocational qualification that can really be said to have stood the test of time – six decades and counting – are BTECs, which, ironically, the Government wants to scale back.&nbsp;</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<p><em>A shorter version of this blog was first published as <a href="https://twitter.com/JohnnySRich/status/1626548454510952450" target="_blank" rel="noopener">a thread on Twitter on 17th February 2023</a>.</em></p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='T Levels: what&#039;s the win for employers?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='T Levels: what&#039;s the win for employers?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/t-levels-whats-the-win-for-employers/">T Levels: what&#8217;s the win for employers?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Mar 2022 11:17:55 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=1099</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>What is CEIAG and how does know what it is help us improve it?</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/">Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/' data-summary='What is CEIAG and how does know what it is help us improve it?' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><strong><em>The Education Select Committee has launched an inquiry into CEIAG – Careers Education, Information, Advice and Guidance – and issued a call for evidence to which <a href="https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/107283/pdf/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">I submitted a few thoughts</a>.</em></strong></p>



<p>Among the many points I made, there were two that I thought might be worth blogging about. Firstly what do we actually mean by CEIAG? Secondly, what does that tell us about professional careers practitioners?  </p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">What is CEIAG?</h4>



<p>It&#8217;s worth drawing a distinction between the components of&nbsp;CEIAG and why it is necessary to consider them separately as well as together.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Careers education&nbsp;</strong>is education about careers, ie. learning about the different ways people make a living, what those different careers involve and some of the pathways that people take into and through careers. Ideally, careers education also involves learning about employability (those attributes that mean an employee can add value to an employer), how to acquire it and how to demonstrate it to a potential employer.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Careers information</strong>&nbsp;is factual. It may be data (for example, labour market information) or it may be other factual information, but generally, it is largely uncontentious (if soundly derived) and lacks context. One analogy I often use is to say that if I say “beer in this pub is £2 a pint”, I am providing you with information. In isolation, information is not very helpful to the person at the receiving end.</p>



<p><strong>Careers advice</strong>&nbsp;puts information into context, making it potentially useful to any person who happens to receive it. To use the same analogy, it would be <em>advice</em> to say that “the average price of beer is £2.40/pint, so this pub is relatively cheap”. Good advice is true in a general sense, even though it is insensitive to any individual’s perspective.&nbsp;</p>



<p><strong>Careers guidance</strong>, however, is personalised and starts with the individual and their hopes, opportunities and needs. For example, it is guidance to ask, “Are you thirsty? Do you like beer? How much can you afford? What are your alternatives?”&nbsp;</p>



<p>I find this a useful distinction because it helps us understand how best to deliver the component parts of CEIAG. Careers support should not stop at CEIAG though. Beyond those components we should not overlook the potential role of mentoring, behavioural/mindset support and practical help (such as funding for trips and open days or clothes appropriate for work experience, etc).</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">Careers physicians</h4>



<p>Of the four components of CEIAG, guidance is the most useful to the individual, but the hardest to deliver and largely redundant without the other three. Guidance requires knowledge, skills and contact (albeit sometimes virtually) with the person being guided. A careers guidance practitioner bears enormous responsibility because it is their role to draw aspirations out of their client and frame them in the context of opportunities. </p>



<p>I often find myself drawing comparisons between professional careers practitioners and doctors. </p>



<p>A doctor uses their training, experience and expertise to diagnose someone’s needs and prescribe treatment with the selfless aim of relieving suffering and improving the patient&#8217;s quality of life. </p>



<p>A careers practitioner uses their training, experience and expertise to diagnose someone’s needs and provide guidance with the selfless aim of giving their client self-agency and improving their quality of life.</p>



<p>Like medicine, careers guidance has become an evidence-based, theory-driven profession equipped with sophisticated tools and, given the almost Hippocratic responsibility, careers guidance should never be entrusted to anyone who is not adequately trained to do it responsibly, knowledgeably and professionally. The Government should require anyone working in a publicly funded role as a careers practitioner to be on <a href="https://www.thecdi.net/Professional-Register-">the CDI Professional Register</a>.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">Speaking plainly</h4>



<p>Another parallel with medicine is that careers policy seems to get bogged down in jargon easily. Many professions do this – law, academia, the armed forces – develop a jargon to signal to those on the outside that there is a guarded gateway through which only the cognoscenti may pass.&nbsp;</p>



<p>In the case of careers practitioners, it may be something to do with a defensiveness against the kind of dismissive attitude that they often face and which <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/" data-type="post" data-id="1019">I&#8217;ve written about before</a>.</p>



<p>So, in my submission to the Select Committee, I&nbsp;made&nbsp;a point of writing plainly.</p>



<p>The problem of inadequate CEIAG contributes to huge policy issues: low productivity, social and regional inequality, and the opportunities of individuals to live fulfilled lives. Yet the solutions – or at least the principles behind them are not that complex and don&#8217;t need to be wrapped in gate-keeping language.</p>



<p>After all, the MPs on the&nbsp;Committee – boundless in their wisdom though I&#8217;m sure they are – are not inside the gateway.</p>



<p>Nor am I. I have no qualifications in careers practice and, by my own strictures, I should definitely not be allowed to deliver careers guidance. However, I have worked in awe alongside careers professionals; I have delivered careers education, information and advice for many years; and I have read and researched widely.</p>



<p>Some of the most useful research – for me – has not been the research on careers itself, but the wealth of behavioural science research that has been published in recent decades. This developing understanding gives us a fresh perspective on how humans do that difficult thing of making decisions. By understanding that, we get a whole new window on how to improve CEIAG to promote informed choices. </p>



<p>If anything I&#8217;ve written here has piqued your interest, I do hope you&#8217;ll feel it&#8217;s worth reading my submission in full –&nbsp;I will post it here when the Committee has reviewed it. (Until then, I am not supposed to put it in the public domain.) </p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">UPDATE 30/6/2022</h4>



<p>The Select Committee has now published the evidence it received and so, <a href="https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/107283/pdf/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">I can now share my submission</a>. </p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/' data-summary='What is CEIAG and how does know what it is help us improve it?' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/' data-summary='What is CEIAG and how does know what it is help us improve it?' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/signs-and-wonders-better-ceiag/">Signs and wonders: Better CEIAG</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>Why do we undervalue careers advisers?</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Oct 2021 17:29:38 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Employability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=1019</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>We’ve all heard – or told – tales about how some careers advisor “told me to be a [insert laughably inappropriate career]”, but people who are helped by careers advice tend never to mention it. Why? Can it be true that careers advice is so wide of the mark? Of course not.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/">Why do we undervalue careers advisers?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Why do we undervalue careers advisers?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/' data-summary='We’ve all heard – or told – tales about how some careers advisor “told me to be a [insert laughably inappropriate career]”, but people who are helped by careers advice tend never to mention it. Why? Can it be true that careers advice is so wide of the mark? Of course not.' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><br><strong>This week, the Higher Education Policy Institute published a report highlighting the underprovision of specialist careers support for international students. It highlights an important gap in provision, but part of the research involved a survey of international students, few of whom credited their university careers service with having helped them.</strong></p>



<p>With just cause, Mike Grey of Gradconsult took issue with this on Twitter and I recommend his thread below that got me thinking more widely about the credit that careers advisers get – or fail to get – for their work not only in universities, but in schools, colleges and local services.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-embed is-type-rich is-provider-twitter wp-block-embed-twitter"><div class="wp-block-embed__wrapper">
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-width="550" data-dnt="true"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">In the interesting new <a href="https://twitter.com/HEPI_news?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@HEPI_news</a> report employability support for international students it quotes a UUK statistic that only 2% found their role through their careers service, it might be useful to share some insight from employer campaigns which refutes that sort of stat <img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/1f9f5.png" alt="🧵" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /></p>&mdash; Mike Grey (@MikeGradconsult) <a href="https://twitter.com/MikeGradconsult/status/1448601327823724549?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 14, 2021</a></blockquote><script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
</div></figure>



<p>We’ve all heard – or told – tales about how some careers advisor “told me to be a [insert laughably inappropriate career]”, but people who are helped by careers advice tend never to mention it. Why? Can it be true that careers advice is so wide of the mark? Of course not.</p>



<p>There are multiple cognitive biases here.</p>



<p>For starters, as Mike’s thread shows, there’s a tendency to credit the outcome of a chain of events to the last link, even when the first link is usually more important.</p>



<p>Also, for the sake of our sense of self, we take more personal credit for the choices we make that we consider to have had good outcomes, and we outsource our agency to others when we aren’t so happy about how it turned out.</p>



<p>It’s therefore easy to retrospectively underplay the influence of careers advisers, as Mike describes, even when they have been instrumental in the process.</p>



<p>This effect is exaggerated by the fact that the idea that careers advisers <em>tell</em> anyone what to be is desperately outdated (if indeed it was ever true). Advisers help people explore what they have to offer and want they might want to do in life. They help map pathways that open up opportunities (or that stop them from closing). They help connect people with opportunities that they show an interest in. </p>



<p>What they do not do is puppetry.</p>



<p>The <em>agency</em> – the choice and control – always stays with the ‘client’.</p>



<p>Ensuring that the client feels ownership of their choices and that they came from themselves is an important part of the careers adviser doing their job well. However, in the process, it also means their good work is likely to go unrecognised.</p>



<p>So why the stories about advisers telling people to be secretaries, vicars or podiatrists? My theory is that it may be down to one of four reasons, some cobination of them or even all four together: </p>



<ol class="wp-block-list"><li>The memory may not actually be a faithful record of what happened, but rather during the (often frequent) retelling, the myth has taken over the true events.</li><li>These were mere suggestions on the part of the careers adviser in response to actual interests that the client did mention.</li><li>Rather than even suggestions, they were part of a wider conversation about avenues that could be explored.</li><li>The adviser may have been deliberately exploring unlikely options in order to help the client stretch their horizons, consider new possibilities or mark out areas that were of no interest.</li></ol>



<p>Modern careers advice is driven by well established and well evidenced theoretical approaches. It is delivered by excellent practitioners using sophisticated digital tools. The professionals who deliver careers guidance help people to <em>make</em> their lives just as doctors help to <em>save</em> them.</p>



<p>If we want better careers advice, we should back it more and rely on the expertise of professional practitioners. Relatively meagre public investment in careers education, information, advice and guidance will yield huge returns in helping match employers with employees who will be more productive and fulfilled, and it will lower society’s waste of our shared human capital. </p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Why do we undervalue careers advisers?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/' data-summary='We’ve all heard – or told – tales about how some careers advisor “told me to be a [insert laughably inappropriate career]”, but people who are helped by careers advice tend never to mention it. Why? Can it be true that careers advice is so wide of the mark? Of course not.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='Why do we undervalue careers advisers?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/' data-summary='We’ve all heard – or told – tales about how some careers advisor “told me to be a [insert laughably inappropriate career]”, but people who are helped by careers advice tend never to mention it. Why? Can it be true that careers advice is so wide of the mark? Of course not.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/why-do-we-undervalue-careers-advisers/">Why do we undervalue careers advisers?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>Vocational qualifications: don&#8217;t turn off the tap to make T</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jul 2021 12:31:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=988</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Not a single person has taken a T-level yet and there are still no solutions to finding enough employer support, but DfE thinks we should axe all alternatives.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/">Vocational qualifications: don&#8217;t turn off the tap to make T</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Vocational qualifications: don&#039;t turn off the tap to make T' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/' data-summary='Not a single person has taken a T-level yet and there are still no solutions to finding enough employer support, but DfE thinks we should axe all alternatives.' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><strong>Not a single person has taken a T-level yet and there are still no solutions to the vast challenge of finding enough employer support, but the Department of Education thinks <a href="https://www.tes.com/news/btecs-dfe-finally-announce-level-3-reforms-apprenticeships-t-levels-fe-colleges">the time is right to axe all alternative vocational qualifications</a>.</strong></p>



<p>Vocational qualifications have long been regarded as the low road of post-16 education compared to the more academic pathway of A levels and university. Too often they&#8217;re seen as what you do if you&#8217;re &#8216;not clever enough&#8217;, rather than being a positive choice. The most prominent, BTECs, suffer from this self-fulfilling depiction, but are nevertheless an important route into work and/or higher education for many, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds.</p>



<p>We all desperately want vocational qualifications to be regarded as a different and equally valid route, but replacing the tried, tested, popular, but admittedly flawed BTECs with untried, untested, and clearly flawed T-levels is like burning all your clothes because you’ve heard Primark is having a sale next month. What&#8217;s going to come along probably won&#8217;t be all that great and, in the meantime, you&#8217;re naked.</p>



<p>T-levels have been designed with the best of intentions, but many issues surrounding them remain far from solved. We’ve been here before. BTECs, vocational A levels, GNVQs, National Diplomas, and so on and so on – these were all valiant initiatives that didn&#8217;t live up to the high hopes when tested by realities. Finding a gold standard for vocational qualifications is a path strewn with bodies. It&#8217;s not as if A-levels are a robust gold standard for academic qualifications, so it&#8217;s not surprising how much harder it is for a field with an even more battle-worn past. &nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The iceberg</h2>



<p>For me, the iceberg right in the path of T-levels, whose existence DfE seems reluctant even to acknowledge, is that there just won’t be enough employers willing to provide <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/introduction-of-t-levels/introduction-of-t-levels">the necessary 45 days of work experience</a> – even if the government were willing and able to throw money at the issue.</p>



<p>To employers the current offer is this: take on an untrained learner who will soak up management time, but not contribute significantly to your business&#8217;s productivity (unless they&#8217;re employed in something so menial it gives them no real experiential learning). You&#8217;ll get no money or tax breaks for helping out, but it may mean that, at some point in the future, there may be someone better qualified to work for you – or who you have helped train to work for your competitors. This point in the future may be within a couple of years (a long time in business) or, since T-levels are intended to be a better pathway to higher training and education than BTECs, if your contribution works as it should, it may not be until many years from now.</p>



<p>Even the most socially minded employer is likely to prefer to spend their limited resource of time and money supporting the far more attractive proposition of providing apprenticeships instead which provide a faster, more targeted way of plugging their gaps, where they actually employ the learner and dictate many of the terms of their training.</p>



<p>To scale up T-levels to even 10% of post-16 learners (let alone half) will mean employers investing in the additional provision of around 3.5 million days of work experience every year. It&#8217;s simply unrealistic to imagine this is going to happen without significant bribery – sorry, I mean financial incentives.</p>



<p>Even if I’m wrong (let&#8217;s hope I am) and employers don’t act as they always have in the past, then the provision of T-levels will depend critically on what employers exist within a small radius of where the learner is based and whether they operate in a sector appropriate to the 24 T-level subject areas.</p>



<p>In some areas – big metropolitan centres – there may be plenty of choice, but in the areas where the skills needs are most needed, almost by definition there isn&#8217;t an excess of employer capacity to get involved in training. Almost nowhere will be able to offer anything like a full range of T-level choices. &nbsp;</p>



<p>Even if the government were proposing to throw money at the problem of incentivising existing employers (which they&#8217;re not), the problem of incentivising nonexistent ones is not resolved simply with investment.</p>



<p>Without this work experience component, learners can’t pass the T-level so schools and colleges can&#8217;t offer the courses without those relationships in pace. Of course, DfE (and the T-level regulator IfATE) could relax or rewrite the rules on whether work experience is strictly necessary and how much, but then T-levels will lose their key point of differentiation. We’d be better off keeping BTECs.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">A stormy T-cup</h2>



<p>I do understand why DfE thinks that if it allows the continued availability of alternatives to T-levels, then they’re not giving the new qualification every bit of backing that they can. However, I would argue that, if T-levels can’t rise above the competition as attractive and valuable qualifications because they’re genuinely a better choice, then making them the <em>only</em> choice will make them weaker not stronger.</p>



<p>This government is genuinely engaged in trying to solve the problems of ‘the other 50%’ (those who don&#8217;t follow academic pathways) and ‘the Cinderella sector’ (further education and technical colleges), but they won’t make vocational education right by making the same mistakes that got us here in the first place. Indeed, the danger – the brick wall towards which they are steering deliberately and at speed – is to undermine the very thing they hope to improve.&nbsp;</p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Vocational qualifications: don&#039;t turn off the tap to make T' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/' data-summary='Not a single person has taken a T-level yet and there are still no solutions to finding enough employer support, but DfE thinks we should axe all alternatives.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='Vocational qualifications: don&#039;t turn off the tap to make T' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/' data-summary='Not a single person has taken a T-level yet and there are still no solutions to finding enough employer support, but DfE thinks we should axe all alternatives.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/vocational-qualifications-dont-turn-off-the-tap-to-make-t/">Vocational qualifications: don&#8217;t turn off the tap to make T</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>What&#8217;s really wrong with the NSS?</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Apr 2021 15:11:09 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HE policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Student choice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Student information]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teaching and learning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[engagement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[national student survey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NSS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[OfS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[satisfaction]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=935</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Drawing on my piece for HEPI, I explain why the National Student Survey shouldn't change and why – and how – it should.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/">What&#8217;s really wrong with the NSS?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='What&#039;s really wrong with the NSS?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/' data-summary='Drawing on my piece for HEPI, I explain why the National Student Survey shouldn&#039;t change and why – and how – it should.' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p>The Higher Education Policy Institute has kindly published <a href="https://www.hepi.ac.uk/2021/04/19/the-true-potential-of-a-national-student-survey/">an article I wrote on the interim plans for reform of the National Student Survey</a>. </p>
<p>The proposed changes are contained in <a href="https://www.officeforstudents.org.uk/media/b6ad8f44-f532-4b55-aa32-7193497ddf92/nss-review-phase-1-report.pdf">the OfS&#8217;s Phase 1 Report of its NSS Review</a> which was sparked by a somewhat untoward statement by the DfE last year that the NSS was responsible for &#8220;<a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/reducing-bureaucratic-burdens-higher-education/reducing-bureaucratic-burdens-on-research-innovation-and-higher-education#the-office-for-students-and-dfe">dumbing down standards</a>&#8220;. No evidence for this claim was offered and it was exactly the opposite of&#8230; well, everything that they and predecessor governments had ever previously said about NSS&#8217;s role in enhancing the quality of higher education.</p>
<p>Indeed, the credibility afforded to the NSS previously meant that it was a key metric used in the TEF (the Teaching Excellence Framework, as it then was, now called &#8216;the Teaching Excellence and Student Outcomes Framework&#8217;).  Its weighing as part of TEF was downgraded, however, when student opposition to the exercise led to widespread boycotting of the survey.</p>
<p>The main reason the government has gone sour on the NSS though seems to me to be that it doesn&#8217;t endorse their political narrative about higher education – or, even if it does, the signal is too noisy, too <em>nuancy</em>. For example, NSS doesn&#8217;t say that the only good education is one that results in a job. It doesn&#8217;t say that our universities are all world-beating while at the same time managing also to say that they&#8217;re full of woke academics and snowflake students. And it fails woefully to confirm that traditional redbrick and Russell Group unis are better than jumped-up polys. </p>
<p>Indeed, the university with the strongest record of performance in the NSS since its inception is – wait for it – the Open University. What should we make of that? There are multiple explanations for its NSS success, not least the fact that the survey is taken as students approach graduation and for OU students, that&#8217;s likely to have been a long, hard slog of many years, involving considerable commitment and sacrifice. Anyone who wasn&#8217;t going to give a good report will probably have fallen by the wayside by that point or at the very least will be convincing themselves that it was all worth it after all. Another explanation is that the OU does an amazing job for its students far exceeding their expectations and therefore yielding high satisfaction. </p>
<p>What it doesn&#8217;t tell us is anything absolute. No wonder the government has lost interest in the NSS – it doesn&#8217;t tell them anything clearly or that&#8217;s politically helpful and even what it does tell them is not what they wanted to hear.</p>
<p>By chance, the DfE does happen to be right that the NSS needs reforming. It&#8217;s just it&#8217;s not for the reasons they imagine. <a href="https://www.hepi.ac.uk/2021/04/19/the-true-potential-of-a-national-student-survey/">As my HEPI article explains</a>, the problems lie in (i) imagining that NSS can ever be about informing prospective students helpfully, (ii) the snapshot data dip process of a survey and (iii) the over-emphasis on satisfaction as a measure of quality when it is in fact a function of expectation compared to delivery. </p>
<p>The reform needed is to shift to a longitudinal national survey of student <em>engagement</em> that tracks shifting patterns throughout a student&#8217;s time at university. Engagement has been shown to be an indicative precursor of positive learning outcomes. If you can show that a student has been effectively engaged throughout their studies, you&#8217;ve got a good indicator of effective education.</p>
<p>Satisfaction measures are poor proxies that will never tell you much and will always be too easily gamed or misinterpreted. They do not, however, dumb down anything that wasn&#8217;t dumb already. </p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='What&#039;s really wrong with the NSS?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/' data-summary='Drawing on my piece for HEPI, I explain why the National Student Survey shouldn&#039;t change and why – and how – it should.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='What&#039;s really wrong with the NSS?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/' data-summary='Drawing on my piece for HEPI, I explain why the National Student Survey shouldn&#039;t change and why – and how – it should.' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/whats-really-wrong-with-the-nss/">What&#8217;s really wrong with the NSS?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>Invention, engineering and creativity</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Apr 2021 17:38:36 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Employability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Engineering]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Skills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[engineering]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://johnnyrich.com/?p=929</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Prince Philip said, "everything that wasn't invented by God is invented by an engineer". Was he right or did he do a disservice to engineers and artists?</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/">Invention, engineering and creativity</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Invention, engineering and creativity' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/' data-summary='Prince Philip said, &quot;everything that wasn&#039;t invented by God is invented by an engineer&quot;. Was he right or did he do a disservice to engineers and artists?' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p>Prince Philip, whose funeral takes place this weekend, once said, &#8220;<a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-35201197">everything that wasn&#8217;t invented by God is invented by an engineer</a>&#8220;. He was himself an engineer by training and this pithy line is a favourite among his fellow engineers.</p>
<p>It brilliantly captures the fact that the world around us is largely manufactured and that the genius of engineers comes not only in the process of fabrication, but in hiding the genius involved.</p>
<p>That said, the idea that everything not of the natural world (let&#8217;s leave God out of it for now) is the work of engineers is patent nonsense. On my wall is a painting. On my shelves, there are novels. Certainly, engineers are responsible for paints, for paper, for inks, for the printing presses, for computers and for so much else involved in delivering these products to me. But the artworks themselves are surely also something not of the natural world and yet invented? </p>
<p>Any writer who has had to invent characters, a plot or an elegant turn of phrase knows that &#8216;invention&#8217; is <em>not</em> the sole preserve of God and engineers.</p>
<p>However, I think this leads us to a better understanding of what engineers really do. Engineers – like God* and artists – are creators.</p>
<p>To me, Philip&#8217;s comment belittles artists – albeit unintentionally. Instead of seeing engineering as applied science – or, worse still, fixing broken stuff – we should see engineering as an act of creation akin to the arts.</p>
<p>It <em>was</em> seen that way once upon a time. The relationship between the pure artist, the skilled craftsperson, the experienced artisan and the inventor was regarded as a continuum. We all know that Leonardo da Vinci was all these things, but so too were William Morris and Alec Issigonis. And today, the likes of Grayson Perry or Rachel Whiteread require the skills of their craft as much as James Dyson and Jonathan Ives need artistic vision.</p>
<p>The Duke of Edinburgh was a staunch champion for engineering, but his support failed to abate a crisis in the UK&#8217;s engineering skills pipeline. We have <a href="https://www.engineeringuk.com/research/engineering-uk-report/">an estimated shortfall of 124,000 skilled engineers and technicians <em>every year</em></a>. The only way that this situation can be resolved is if the perception of engineering among young people – and young women in particular – is radically shifted. </p>
<p>Children and teens love to create – to build sandcastles, to paint, to play Minecraft or to express themselves through performance. They don&#8217;t see a distinction between drawing as &#8216;artistic&#8217; invention and creating a Lego house as &#8216;engineering&#8217; invention. Somehow, though, as a society, we beat this out of them, creating the idea that engineering is more about physics and maths than ingenuity and design. </p>
<p>Young people also care passionately about the problems we face – social challenges, environmental emergencies, sustainability. These are problems that – if humans can ever fix them – it will be through the efforts of, among others, engineers. Engineering offers young people an opportunity not only to be creators, but also to be world-saving superheroes. </p>
<p>Other countries tend to be better than the UK at never letting their young people lose sight of the creativity in engineering. We must learn to do better too. It is perhaps unfair to say the Duke&#8217;s comment inadvertently depicts the world as a place of opposition between humans engineers and natural wonders, but certainly we need to regard our human power to create – both beauty and design – as something that is not only in harmony with nature, but an active part of it.  </p>
<p>* Or natural processes, depending on your religious perspective. I reference God because the Duke did. </p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Invention, engineering and creativity' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/' data-summary='Prince Philip said, &quot;everything that wasn&#039;t invented by God is invented by an engineer&quot;. Was he right or did he do a disservice to engineers and artists?' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='Invention, engineering and creativity' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/' data-summary='Prince Philip said, &quot;everything that wasn&#039;t invented by God is invented by an engineer&quot;. Was he right or did he do a disservice to engineers and artists?' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/invention-engineering-and-creativity/">Invention, engineering and creativity</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>University admissions: what&#8217;s the real problem?</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Mar 2021 21:58:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Admissions and access]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Fair access]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Clearing]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnnyrich.com/?p=877</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Data presented by UCAS's Chief Executive Clare Marchant shows starkly the correlation between clearing and drop-out...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/">University admissions: what&#8217;s the real problem?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='University admissions: what&#039;s the real problem?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/' data-summary='Data presented by UCAS&#039;s Chief Executive Clare Marchant shows starkly the correlation between clearing and drop-out...' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><strong>This slide, presented by UCAS&#8217;s Chief Executive Clare Marchant at a recent event hosted by <a href="http://wonkhe.com">Wonkhe</a> on higher education admissions, shows starkly the correlation between clearing and drop-out that I have been banging on about since the 1990s.</strong></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1024" height="357" src="https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-1024x357.png" alt="" class="wp-image-886" srcset="https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-1024x357.png 1024w, https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-300x105.png 300w, https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-768x268.png 768w, https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-1536x536.png 1536w, https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-2048x714.png 2048w, https://johnnyrich.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Screenshot-2021-03-02-at-15.43.42-1-425x148.png 425w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /><figcaption>Image: UCAS</figcaption></figure>


<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>In actual fact, it doesn&#8217;t quite show that.</div>
<div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>What it does show is a clear link between those students who drop-out and those students who arrive at university specifically through the &#8216;direct to clearing&#8217; (DTC) route. This is an unusual pathway, often used by students other than your typical decent-grades-18-year-old school-leaver. So there would be nothing surprising if their outcomes in terms of drop-out weren&#8217;t the same as other students. In other words, it is conceivable that the correlation between clearing and drop-out is peculiar to (or more pronounced among) DTC applicants.</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
</div>
<div>I don&#8217;t think so and I have good evidence for thinking otherwise. For several years around the turn of the millennium, Push published data showing that what we called &#8216;flunk rates&#8217; (the percentage who drop-out or fail) and the proportion of students that each HEI admitted through clearing (using data that the universities themselves supplied). The two datasets had a correlation coefficient of 0.91 – in other words, they were close to identical lists.</div>


<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>The media was understandably very interested and&nbsp;I did the media rounds trying to let the figures speak for themselves.</div>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Most universities, even those who had provided their clearing data to Push, dismissed or denied any meaningful link. There were some notable exceptions – vice-chancellors who, rather than blame the messenger, recognised that there may be a problem here.&nbsp;</div>


<div> </div>
<div>All I was trying to say was that the data suggested that hasty choices might lead to regret and students without their hoped-for grades should be cautious if looking for clearing options and should consider reapplying instead. </div>


<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Meanwhile, UCAS itself was also disputing the connection, promoting the line that clearing was the best way to get a university place if you hadn&#8217;t made your grades. To be fair, they were relying on data that was even less complete than mine.</div>



<div> </div>
<div>Push had surveyed the universities themselves, asking them to self-declare the proportion accepted through clearing. Around two-thirds responded and the numbers that were being reported to us were, on average about 75% higher than UCAS&#8217;s data suggested. Bearing in mind that one might imagine that those universities with the highest clearing rates might be the least likely to share their data, it appeared that the official clearing process was recording perhaps less than half the numbers accepted through that route.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>What&#8217;s more, the proportion entering through clearing appears to have grown since then (as student numbers have continued to rise), although even that growth may merely be the true scale of clearing being more accurately recorded. Even now though, there is what Mark Corver (<a href="https://datahe.uk">DataHE</a>&#8216;s admissions number-cruncher extraordinaire) calls <a href="https://wonkhe.com/blogs/the-thickening-fog-of-the-ucas-rpas/">a &#8220;twilight zone of UCAS data&#8221;</a> – the RPAs or &#8216;record of prior acceptance&#8217; students – and that number is also growing. If the number of students entering through clearing really is rising, it may mean the proportion of students who end up dropping out will rise too.</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>At this point, let me make it absolutely clear: correlation is not causation and I&#8217;m not claiming it is.</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>It is perfectly possible that arriving through clearing is not the reason why students drop out. Indeed, I&#8217;d go so far as to say that, even if it is <em>a</em> reason, it is not the only one. Maybe, for example, clearing gets you into universities whose drop-out rate is higher for an unrelated reason; maybe those who more likely to drop-out are more likely to opt to enter through clearing; or maybe clearing and drop-out share a separate unconnected cause, such as being less well advised.</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>That said, it didn&#8217;t take a genius to see that rash choices were being made by students and universities alike and that there were (and still are) a lot of poor matches arising from the chaos of clearing.&nbsp;</div>



<div>This has really important repercussions as we consider switching to a system of post-qualifications admissions (PQA).</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Drop-out is only ever the tip of the iceberg. Most students battle on regardless. After all, let&#8217;s remember what drop-out means: you&#8217;ve got the student debts, you&#8217;ve probably blown your chance of being state-funded throughout a degree, and yet you&#8217;ve got nothing to show for it. Worse that that, you have a black hole in your CV which employers might (unfairly) look on as a mark of failure. &nbsp;</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Behind the drop-out data, there are thousands of stories of hopes shattered and opportunities dashed. And for every person that drops out, there are many more for whom higher education has been so much less than it could or should have been.&nbsp;</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>That&#8217;s why the admissions system must deliver good matches between students and unis.</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>It is also why the Department for Education&#8217;s unequivocal support for PQA is ill-thought out. The last time the government was beguiled into thinking PQA was a good idea (in 2011), at least they had the sense to announce an investigation first rather than preempting any consideration of the practicalities. This time, the Secretary of State announced a consultation would be launched in advance of the introduction of PQA (betraying either a misunderstanding or contempt for the point of consultations). &nbsp;</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>PQA does look very attractive in principle because it is assumed to mean an end to predicted grades and clearing.&nbsp;&nbsp;However, in practice it probably means an end to neither – and, while failing to make anything better, it might make other matters far worse. &nbsp;&nbsp;</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Teachers would still need to use predicted grades to &#8216;guide&#8217; students to consider applying to HEIs that might accept them – which would need to be done in advance of actual grades so that students could visit them in order to make an informed choice. &nbsp;</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>While that means HEIs would not be using predictions to make offers, students would still be using them to make applications. The supposed unfairness and lack of reliability of predictions would still be a big factor, but they&#8217;d be even less transparent and harder to mitigate. In any case, as <a href="https://www.hepi.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Where-next-for-university-admissions_Hepi-Report-136_FINAL2.pdf">Mark Corver (again) has effectively argued</a>, predicted grades are perhaps no less imperfect that actual grades and any bias may not be quite as <a href="https://www.ucu.org.uk/media/8409/Predicted-grades-accuracy-and-impact-Dec-16/pdf/Predicted_grades_report_Dec2016.pdf">Gill Wyness</a>, among others, has argued.</div>



<div> </div>
<div>Furthermore, unless you shift the date that grades are published and/or the academic year start by months, you&#8217;d be compressing application activity into a matter of a few weeks. In other words, rather than no clearing, <em>everyone</em> would be in clearing. </div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>Not only would clearing have to sort about eight times as many applicants, but they would have to go through the whole application system without the support and guidance of their schools and colleges which, by then, the students would have left.</div>



<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>There are ways that PQA could be made to work&nbsp;(I&#8217;ve&nbsp;<a href="https://johnnyrich.com/why-pqa-should-not-be-pdq">written on this blog</a> about this), but, unsurprisingly, it&#8217;s neither as simple nor as attractive as Gavin Williamson&#8217;s announcement seemed to assume it to be. It would take more far more fundamental and far-reaching changes to post-16 education. (We can chalk this up to the long list of reasons why radical reform might be a good idea, even though no government is ever likely to grasp those nettles and use them to make nettle pyjamas.)</div>



<div> </div>
<div>DfE imagines that what needs fixing about admissions is the unconditional offers and unreliability of predictions. In fact, the more serious problems are those connected with poor choices about what and where to study. These build  higher hidden hurdles for the disadvantaged. All applicants need to be able to make well informed, supported choices over time.</div>
<div> </div>
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<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='University admissions: what&#039;s the real problem?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/' data-summary='Data presented by UCAS&#039;s Chief Executive Clare Marchant shows starkly the correlation between clearing and drop-out...' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='University admissions: what&#039;s the real problem?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/' data-summary='Data presented by UCAS&#039;s Chief Executive Clare Marchant shows starkly the correlation between clearing and drop-out...' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/university-admissions-whats-the-real-problem/">University admissions: what&#8217;s the real problem?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>The long Covid of careers</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Oct 2020 11:38:11 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Employability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Skills]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The long Covid of careers: What's the equivalent of hand-washing and mask-wearing for young people's careers</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/the-long-covid-of-careers/">The long Covid of careers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='The long Covid of careers' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/the-long-covid-of-careers/' data-summary='The long Covid of careers: What&#039;s the equivalent of hand-washing and mask-wearing for young people&#039;s careers' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
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<p>Covid casts a long shadow over lives. As we are discovering, the condition can persist for months or, as we&nbsp;may yet discover, possibly years. It also casts a shadow of grief over those who have lost –&nbsp;or will lose –&nbsp;those they love. But even those who, thankfully, have never been infected may yet find their lives have been blighted for years or even decades by this pandemic’s other long-term wasting effects.</p>



<p>The labour market has rarely looked worse for young people and emerging from education into a recession can handicap a whole career. At first there are no jobs and, by the time there are, there’s another generation coming into bloom, fresh out of school or university, unwilted by months or years of unemployment.</p>



<p>So what can young people do for their careers that&#8217;s the equivalent of hand-washing and mask-wearing? I was asked this recently in an <a href="https://youtu.be/BdJP9l9iWE8">interview on BBC London</a>, but of course, there was only time for a few words, so I thought I’d share my six tips in more detail. </p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">1. Take cover</h4>



<p>The outlook for graduates is not great at the moment, but it&#8217;s even worse for non-graduates. School-leavers should think about university, further education or training and graduates should consider postgraduate study. In effect you’re hiding from the storm until it blows over, but you’re also getting yourself fitter for when it has.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">2. Keep trying</h4>



<p>There may be fewer employers out there who want and need your skills, but there are still some. It only takes one and each rejection should be seen as one step closer because you are getting more information each time about what you have to offer that&#8217;s valuable and how best to show it.</p>



<p>In fact, &#8216;rejection&#8217; should never mean dejection . From the employers’ point of view, they may have hundreds of applicants, but only one job to offer. Even if a hundred people might have been right for the job, still only one can get it.</p>



<p>Remember, you may be more than good enough for every job you apply for and a rejection should never be taken as anything other than that, for whatever reason, you weren’t the right match on this occasion.</p>



<p>Do try to find out those reasons though. If you get beyond the standard letter first-stage rejection – particularly if you get as far as an interview – ask for feedback. Most of the time you’ll get a standard reply, but the one time you don’t may give you a huge advantage for your next time.</p>



<p>It’s hard to maintain your resilience and self-esteem when you can’t find work, but it helps to know that your turn is coming and each application – even each rejection – is taking you closer. &nbsp;</p>



<figure class="wp-block-pullquote"><blockquote><p>Rejection should never mean dejection.</p></blockquote></figure>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">3. Join the Kickstart scheme</h4>



<p>If you&#8217;re 18-24, on Universal Credit and living in England, Scotland or Wales, you may well be eligible to join <a href="https://kickstart.campaign.gov.uk" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">the government’s Kickstart Scheme</a>.</p>



<p>This allows employers to take you on at pretty much no cost to them for a six-month placement. (In fact the employer gets £1,500 towards training you and the cost of employing you). The government will give the employer money to pay you at minimum wage for 25 hours a week for up to six months. The employer can choose to pay you more or employ you for more hours at their own expense.</p>



<p>Your Job Centre can put you forward for opportunities or an employer can recruit you and put you on the scheme if you&#8217;re eligible. You can even approach an employer you want to work for and try suggesting it. There&#8217;s very little for them to lose by taking you on. The only catch for the employer is that they have to take on 30 people, which only big firms can do. They can, however, go through one of many of the intermediary firms that are grouping smaller companies together to get at least 30 between them.</p>



<p>In both the organisations I run, we are looking to take on some Kickstart trainees and I’m putting together a package of training and experience that I hope will be really worthwhile. <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/contact-me" data-type="page" data-id="60">Let me know</a> if you think you might be eligible and I&#8217;d be happy to consider you. (I&#8217;m sorry to say that, if you aren&#8217;t eligible, I really have no vacancies right now.)</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">4. Put yourself out there</h4>



<p>I don&#8217;t normally advocate working for free – your time and labour are valuable – not least because you should at least have your expenses compensated for work experience. However, if you&#8217;re doing work experience remotely, you probably don&#8217;t have many <em>additional</em> expenses.</p>



<p>Put yourself out there by approaching the kind of companies you might want to work for and offering to take on the kind of jobs they&#8217;ve got no one to do right now, because either everyone is furloughed or because everyone is running to stand still.</p>



<p>You can offer administrative support. You can offer to write internal or external communications. You can ask them if they want any of the Zoom webinars that they may be holding or attending to be minuted or written up into summaries. And so on. They&#8217;ve not got much to lose if you&#8217;re offering to do stuff that otherwise wouldn&#8217;t get done and if you don&#8217;t create more work for them by offering to do it.&nbsp;</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">5. Get creative</h4>



<p>Even in the midst of Covid, there are opportunities for you to set up your own business.</p>



<p>To take two examples: I know a guy who started buying second-hand bikes at the start of lockdown, giving them a service and then selling them on. Demand was so high that he managed to make over £3k profit in just a couple of months.</p>



<p>Someone else offered to help neighbours who were doing lockdown clear-outs to sell their old junk on eBay in exchange for a cut of the profit. She needed no start-up capital, just time and an internet connection. Her bedroom was full of boxes of other people’s stuff.</p>



<p>These may not be opportunities for you, but they show that they are ways to make a business out of the things people need right now because their needs and behaviour have been forced to change.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">6. Use your time well</h4>



<p>You need to look after your mental well-being as well as your employability. Maintain a routine and do useful things. Things that keep you happy and healthy are useful, so long as they aren&#8217;t short-term fixes.</p>



<p>Develop your transferable skills. Extend your contact base (by improving your professional social media presences). Grow your understanding of the sector you want to get into.&nbsp;</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">7. Consider jobs that aren’t part of your career plan</h4>



<p>Whether it’s being a Deliveroo driver, a Track &amp; Trace caller or a security guard, there may be jobs you believe you could get and do well, but you don’t want to because they’re nothing like what you want to do, you won’t earn much and they’ll just take you on a path you don’t want to go down.</p>



<p>Only you can decide whether the trade-off is worth it. It depends on how long you feel you can go without an earned income, how competitive is the sector you want to get into, how bad the alternative seems to you and so on. That said, knowing that you’re working can get you out of a rut for your career, your finances and, perhaps most of all, your sense of self-worth.</p>



<p>What’s more, a gap on your CV is something that will always raise a question in an employer&#8217;s mind. They won&#8217;t rule you out for it, but they may want to hear how you filled it.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-pullquote"><blockquote><p>Set yourself a time limit so that the job you took to get out of a rut doesn’t become a whole new rut.</p></blockquote></figure>



<p>Taking the &#8216;wrong job&#8217;, can look like you&#8217;re not committed to the sector you actually do want or it can look like you knuckled down when you needed to and you gathered skills and experience wherever you could. You can certainly present your experiences that way and show the transferable skills you collected in the process.</p>



<p>Set yourself a time limit so that the job you took to get out of a rut doesn’t become a whole new rut. So make an appointment with yourself in, say, six months and, when you get to that point, if you&#8217;re still there, but don&#8217;t want to be, allow yourself maybe six weeks to find something new. If you don’t, you can just walk. Accept it may take a while to get something better, but doing so is now your full-time job. Try to save money in the meantime to give yourself more options.</p>



<p>Who knows, though? You may just discover that trying something a little off the beaten career path teaches you a thing or two about what you really do want.</p>


</div></div>


<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='The long Covid of careers' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/the-long-covid-of-careers/' data-summary='The long Covid of careers: What&#039;s the equivalent of hand-washing and mask-wearing for young people&#039;s careers' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='The long Covid of careers' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/the-long-covid-of-careers/' data-summary='The long Covid of careers: What&#039;s the equivalent of hand-washing and mask-wearing for young people&#039;s careers' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/the-long-covid-of-careers/">The long Covid of careers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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		<title>Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#8216;failsafe&#8217;?</title>
		<link>https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnny Rich]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Oct 2019 23:11:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Admissions and access]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Careers education, information, advice & guidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Student choice]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[employability]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnnyrich.com/?p=766</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>I don’t think I agree with the idea of university as a ‘failsafe’, although I’m still not sure I understand what you intend by the word. So I’m going to use Matt Pinkett&#8217;s line: ‘Aim for whatever you want to do, and if you don’t get it, well, at least you can go to university.’ That assumes that whatever you want to do won’t be&#160;best&#160;achieved by going to uni. Obviously, university is not the best route for everything or for everyone, but for the vast majority of the best paid and most secure jobs, it is – if not a prerequisite – at least a</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/">Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#8216;failsafe&#8217;?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#039;failsafe&#039;?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/' data-app-id-name='category_above_content'></div>
<p><strong>In <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/is-it-worth-going-to-uni-if-youre-from-a-poor-family">my last blog post</a>, I mentioned that I&#8217;d got into a correspondence with teacher and author Matt Pinkett about whether young people – especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds – should aspire to university. </strong></p>
<p><strong>Matt suggested that perhaps young people should set their sights on the career they want and, if they can&#8217;t make serious progress towards it as they leave school, then they should consider university as a back-up – a &#8216;failsafe&#8217;, as he called it. </strong></p>
<p><strong>After our previous discussions, he asked what I thought about this. This was my response (with a few edits to make it a blog more than a email to Matt)&#8230;</strong></p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator"/>



<p>I don’t think I agree with the idea of university as a ‘failsafe’, although I’m still not sure I understand what you intend by the word. So I’m going to use Matt Pinkett&#8217;s line: ‘Aim for whatever you want to do, and if you don’t get it, well, at least you can go to university.’ That assumes that whatever you want to do won’t be&nbsp;best&nbsp;achieved by going to uni.</p>



<p>Obviously, university is <em><strong>not</strong></em> the best route for everything or for everyone, but for the vast majority of the best paid and most secure jobs, it is – if not a prerequisite – at least a head start.</p>



<p>The evidence is pretty clear: on average, uni helps everyone regardless of background, earn more in life and have other benefits such as health and happiness. It doesn’t eliminate the social advantages some were born with, but it does narrow the gap a bit. </p>



<p>For many students with disadvantage, higher education is not only transformative, it is almost the <em>only</em> thing that could ever have provided them with that transformation.<em> On average</em>, uni would be the right thing to do, if you are able and so minded.&nbsp;</p>



<p>However, the sticking point there is ‘on average’. There are some people  whom it won’t suit or for whom it further their aspirations. I never try to persuade people to go to uni, but I do try to outline the advantages – and disadvantages – so they can make an informed choice for themselves. You need to consider the individual. All guidance should be ‘Person first’. Or, more to the point, the person should consider their individual needs for themselves.</p>



<p>Rather than ‘aim for what you want to do’, I tend to think about ‘what do you want to <strong><em>be</em></strong>’. </p>



<p>For all of us, the answer to that is that we want to be happy. What happiness means to each of us and what will bring that happiness is different (and changes over time), but it might involve earning a lot (however much ‘a lot’ might be); it might be fame, security, a work:life balance, a family, power, a sense of doing something worthwhile etc. Each of us has a set of rewards we want in life and each career has the potential to deliver a different set of rewards. Finding a career that delivers the set you want is half the journey.</p>



<p>The other half is to be able to offer to that career the skillset that the employer will want. Just as each career offers a different reward set, each one demands a different skillset. If you don’t have the suitable skillset, the job might be a good match for you, but you’re not a good match for it. &nbsp;</p>



<p>It’s worth unpacking what that skillset actually is. It’s not just skills, but broad ‘employability’. Employability comprises the following in no particular order:</p>



<p>(1) <strong>Skills</strong>: <br>(a) Hard skills, ie job specific skills, such as welding if you want to be a welder;<br>(b) Soft skills, ie transferable skills, such as communication, team work or numeracy, which are all useful in any job, albeit to varying degrees.</p>



<p>(2) <strong>Knowledge</strong>, some of which is specific to the job (eg. a surgeon’s understanding of anatomy), but much of it is broader (although to some extent, this comes up in (4) below)</p>



<p>(3) <strong>Character</strong>, which comprises attitude, behaviours and personality (and includes important traits like grit, resilience and a growth mindset, but also determination, politeness and amiability). &nbsp;</p>



<p>(4) <strong>Social capital</strong>, or how society perceives your intrinsic value (based on class, age, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, height, accent, use of the right fork, etc). This is the often unwelcome component of employability because it explains why Boris Johnson gets to be Prime Minister with a record of being repeatedly sacked when anyone from a disadvantaged background wouldn’t have been given a second chance. We cannot ignore social capital though, if only to recognise that, in order to make it matter less, you need to ensure you have all the other components in overwhelming supply. There are also things that one can do to build social capital – most importantly, the wider knowledge is key to this and not in a bad way.</p>



<p>Although these four components comprise ‘employability’, actually we are talking about something far broader than merely producing career fodder. We’re talking about creating rounded people: someone with a full complement of the four components is well equipped for making a life, not just a living.</p>



<p>What role does university play in any of this? It’s easy to see that disadvantaged students might start out with even more limited employability than more affluent students. University explicitly sets out to build knowledge and often hard skills too. It builds soft skills, although it tends to do this implicitly. It builds social capital through exposure to a wider cross-section of society, establishing networks and broadening horizons. It might also build character, but it is arguable whether it does so better than the ‘university of life’. In any case, research shows that disadvantaged students tend to have a lower propensity to take advantage of many of the character-building opportunities (such as extra-curricular activities) that uni might offer. This is often down to money, circumstances and habits formed in school.</p>



<p>When you look at it like this, you can see how uni builds employability into a quality some researchers have called ‘graduateness’, which is clearly prized by employers.</p>



<p>So, should uni be a failsafe or a first option? As I said, it has to be down to the individual and the gap between their skillset and that required by the career that might fulfil their reward set. </p>



<p>Critical to this is the questions of ‘if not uni, then what?’ Around 50% of school-leavers do not go to university. Most go into jobs (usually just ‘jobs’, rather than ‘careers’). A few go into apprenticeships, training or other non-higher education. Too many become NEETs (Not in Education, Employment or Training). There’s not a sufficiently good other pathway (although there absolutely <em>should </em>be) and, unless there is a better option, university must surely look attractive to anyone with the grades and willingness to spend longer in education.</p>



<p>Degree apprenticeships are a decent option, but they are few and far between, fairly limited in the choice of jobs, and subject to many of the same prejudices against the disadvantaged that exist at any level of employment.</p>



<p>I haven’t touched here on the fact that uni is an expensive option. It is. And I believe the student/graduate’s contribution to the cost is disproportionate. (In fact, I have proposed <a href="https://www.hepi.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Policy-Note-10-Paper-November-2018-Fairer-funding-the-case-for-a-graduate-levy.pdf">an alternative system of funding</a>.) That said, uni is pretty much free at the point of entry and you only pay when you earn a decent wage. In that sense, cost should not be seen as a barrier, although it might be seen as an impediment.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator"/>



<p><strong>I agreed with Matt Pinkett that he could also publish my comments on his own blog which can be found at <a href="https://allearssite.wordpress.com">All Ears</a>. I&#8217;m really grateful to him for what&#8217;s been – for me at least – an interesting discussion.</strong></p>
<div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#039;failsafe&#039;?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><div style='display:none;' class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app='recommendations' data-title='Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#039;failsafe&#039;?' data-link='https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/' data-app-id-name='category_below_content'></div><p>The post <a href="https://johnnyrich.com/should-uni-be-an-aspiration-or-a-failsafe/">Should uni be an aspiration – or a &#8216;failsafe&#8217;?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://johnnyrich.com">Johnny Rich</a>.</p>
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