Upload
universities-uk
View
781
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Yolande Burgess, London Councils - What collaboration can achieve
Citation preview
www.londoncouncils.gov.uk
What collaboration can achieve
Yolande Burgess, London Councils Young People's Education and Skills
Aim of this workshop
To demonstrate how local government and Higher Education can collaboratively:
• take an evidence-based approach to addressing priorities
• contribute to national as well as local priorities
• consider fully the whole student lifecycle
What we did know
• The shape of education across the 14-19 age range
• The key issues for this age range affecting participation, attainment and progression
• A good understanding of the characteristics of disengaged young people and a sound knowledge of local reengagement activity
• A lot of intelligence on activity for lower achievers to reach level 3 by the age of 19
What we needed to know more about
• Higher Education (HE) intelligence beyond the national statistical releases
• The detail behind the HE journey of young London residents - participation, attainment and progression
• The skills HE was providing compared to the skills the London labour market was seeking
• Information on whether the HE investment was paying off - where our graduates getting good jobs
5 or more A*-C GCSE (including E&M)
Intelligent London 2013 - 2013 GCSE and equivalent results
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 20130
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
North EastEast MidlandsSouth WestYorkshire and the HumberEast of EnglandNorth WestWest MidlandsSouth EastLondon
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215214.5
209.5
213.1
209.3210.5
London England (state-funded mainstream)
GCE A level and level 3 results
Department for Education A level and other level 3 results in England: academic year 2012 to 2013
Points per student
Points per entry2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
670
680
690
700
710
720
730
712.8
695.1
682.7
728.2
714.3
706.3
London England (state-funded mainstream)
Level 3 at 19 (national)
Level 2 and 3 attainment by young people in England, SFR 13/2013, DfE
Level 3 by 19 (mainstream)
Intelligent London 2013 - Department for Education Attainment by Young People in England Measured Using Matched Administrative Data: Attainment by Age 19 in 2012
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 201230%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
60%
65%
East Midlands
East of England
London
North East
South East
South West
West Midlands
Yorkshire and the Humber
Qualifications - Level 4+
Intelligent London 2013 - Population Census 2011
Unemployment 16-24 year olds
Jul-S
ep 2
008
Oct-Dec
200
8
Jan-
Mar 2
009
Apr-Ju
n 20
09
Jul-S
ep 2
009
Oct-Dec
200
9
Jan-
Mar 2
010
Apr-Ju
n 20
10
Jul-S
ep 2
010
Oct-Dec
201
0
Jan-
Mar 2
011
Apr-Ju
n 20
11
Jul-S
ep 2
011
Oct-Dec
201
1
Jan-
Mar 2
012
Apr-Ju
n 20
12
Jul-S
ep 2
012
Oct-Dec
201
2
Jan-
Mar 2
013
Apr-Ju
n 20
13
10.0
15.0
20.0
25.0
30.0
London unemployment rate - all 16-24 year olds UK unemployment rate - all 16-24 year olds
London unemployment rate - 16-24 excluding full-time students UK unemployment rate - 16-24 year excluding full-time students
Greater London Authority London Labour Market Indicators - youth unemployment September 2013
Skills shortages
UKCES Skills Survey 2011 proportion of establishments with a skill-shortage vacancy by region
“Drowning problems in an ocean of information
is not the same as solving them”
Ray E. Brown
Project background and collaboration
• Good local research undertaken by Newham and the University of East London showed a potential way forward
• A partnership approach - offering the ‘scale’ of London provided researchers with:– the opportunity to work on city-wide analysis
– sufficient scale to deliver robust information from the HESA Student Return and the Destinations of Leavers from HE Survey
Developing the ‘London story’
• Analysis of progression to university of 18-24 year old London residents in 2011/12 – full/part-time, first/undergraduate degree study (UK universities)
• Time-series analysis showing trends across five years
• Outcomes from HE study - degree classifications and post-degree destinations, including employment and salary range
Disseminating project outcomes
• Wide distribution of the regional report and borough reports
• Political briefing sent out to 1,861 elected local councillors – Does Higher Education investment pay off for young Londoners?
• Launch event December 2013 at UEL attended by 50 plus professionals from local authorities, further and higher education
• Action on Access-UUK-OFFA-HEFCE conference today
The research bonus
• A comprehensive London-wide and borough-level analysis of the HE journey of young London residents: a regional and local evidence base
• A means of engaging London’s political leaders into the HE world
• A ‘line of sight’ through education from age 14 to 24: the relationship between different stages of education and pathways to employment
• Developing a more refined understanding of the relationship between skills and the London labour market: one in every five young people in the UK are not in education, employment or training; by 2022 this will have cost the economy nearly £28 billion
The Higher Education Journey ofyoung London residents
http://members.londoncouncils.gov.uk/London%2520Councils/TheHigherEducationjourneyofyoungLondonresidentsFIN.pdf