Post on 17-Dec-2015
25 March 2009
East Midlands Public Sector
Apprenticeship Summit
2
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
WELCOME TO PERA
AND THE EAST MIDLANDS PUBLIC SECTOR
APPRENTICESHIP SUMMIT
PLEASE SWITCH OFF YOUR MOBILE PHONE
3
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Welcome and introduction
Roger Begy OBE
Chair LSC East Midlands Council
Leader of Rutland County Council
4
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Video message
Phil Hope MP
and Minister for the East Midlands
5
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Welcome and introduction
Roger Begy OBE
Chair LSC East Midlands Council
Leader of Rutland County Council
6
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service
Karen Woodward
National Apprenticeship Service
Regional Director - East Midlands
7
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS)
• Lord Leitch’s aspirations for 400,000 Apprentices in learning In England by 2020
• World Class Apprenticeships: Unlocking Talent, Building Skills for All
• Government’s requirement for all young people to be in education or training until the age of 18 by 2015
• Apprenticeship ‘Entitlement’ by 2013 - to a have a place for each suitably qualified young person
• 35,000 additional starts 2009/10 (equivalent to 272,000 starts)
What are Apprenticeships?
What are Apprenticeships?
8
• High quality Training Programme for employed staff of all ages – priority focus on 16-18 year olds
• Workforce development tool with funding from central Government
• NVQ level 2 or 3 plus Technical Certificate and key skills
• 180 Sector Frameworks developed by Sector Skills Councils
• Employers supported (in most cases) by quality assured Training Providers
• Nationally recognised certification
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS)
What are Apprenticeships?
9
Cont.
• 130,000 employers offering Apprenticeships – including Rolls Royce, British Telecom, Centrica and Tesco
• 100,000 learners now leave the programme each year having passed all elements
• It’s estimated that by 2010/11 more than 900,000 learners will have completed a full Apprenticeship
• Funding will increase by almost a quarter between 2007/08 and 2010/11 to over £1 billion
• Funding for over 25s announced November 08
10
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public SectorThe Government’s Commitment
• 21,000 of the additional 35,000 Apprenticeship places will be
generated from the public sector:
- 5,000 National Health and Service and Social Care
- 2,500 Further education colleges and universities
- 7,500 Local government
- 4,500 Schools and Children’s Services
- 1,000 in Ministry of Defence
- 600 Government Departments
• Government’s aspiration is for 50% of the 21,000 Apprenticeships in the
public sector to be for young people 16-18
• Construction companies winning Building Schools for the Future
Programme from June 09 will have to take-on Apprentices
11
• With immediate effect an assumption that all new posts and all vacant posts at appropriate levels should be offered as Apprenticeship posts;
• That all suitably qualified 16 -18 year old employees currently not in training should be offered Apprenticeships;
• Central and local, Government to lever in the use of Apprenticeships in suppliers through their procurement processes worth more than £175 billion – in particular public construction projects; and
• Public sector bodies to actively look at sharing the risk with SMEs for the employment of apprentices – agency type schemes.
Apprenticeships and the Public Sector
4 key propositions
12
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public SectorIpsos MORI Reaserch
• Over half of all public sector employees are qualified to level 4 compared to 28% of private sector employees
• 17% of private sector workforce are aged 16-24 compared to 7% in the public sector (400,000 16-24 year olds)
• Turnover is 13.5% in the public sector compared to 20.4% in the private sector (12% in Local Authorities)
• Proportionately more over 50’s in the public sector – over a 10 year period at least a third will retire
• Demand is stronger than supply e.g. Luton Borough Council had over 300 applicants for 33 places
13
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public Sector Case for Expansion
• Ageing workforce and future workforce planning
• Social responsibility
• Business/policy rationale
• Skills shortages
• Productivity
• Motivated workforce
14
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public Sector Examples of Good Practice
• London Apprenticeship Taskforce has set up a sub-group to focus on local authority participation in Apprenticeships
• Kent has set up its own in-house training provider ‘Key Training’
• The health sector is pursuing development of innovative blended frameworks to meet service needs which combine clinical skills with retail or technical
15
• Better return on investment - £1300 more profit/efficiency;
• Increased efficiency – 7.5% higher for apprentices;
• Quality of work – 85% right first time V 60%;
• Reduced costs or recruitment, reduced attrition rates, greater staff retention and motivation;
• Ageing workforce and tackling career progression.
Apprenticeships
The benefits
16
• No consistent national system to bring together employers with Apprenticeship vacancies and potential apprentices.
• Implementation of a national matching service identified as a key driver to increase participation rates in Apprenticeships (1 in 5 young people undertaking an apprenticeship each year by 2020).
• January 2008 government published their strategy for the future of Apprenticeships in England - World-Class Apprenticeships: Unlocking talent, building skills for all, this can be found at: http://www.dius.gov.uk/publications/world_class_apprenticeships.pdf
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS)
Apprenticeship Context
17
The National Apprenticeship Service will be fully functional by April 2009 to :
• take end-to-end responsibility for Apprenticeships
• be a separate and distinct service within the LSC April 09 and Skills Funding Agency from April 10
• operate at national and sub-regional level
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS)
National Apprenticeship Service
18
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public Sector The National Apprenticeship Service
The National Apprenticeship Service becomes operational April 2009
- National Vacancy Matching Service (NVMS)
- Employer Services
- Learner Services
- National Policy
www.apprenticeships.org.uk
19
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public Sector Employer Services
• Analyse and understand the national, regional and sub-regional market both in terms of employers and the provider base
• Increase apprenticeship vacancies by raising employers awareness and understanding
• Encourage and support employers to use the vacancy matching system
• Work with Sector Skills Councils
• Develop and support the delivery of Apprenticeship programmes for an
employers workforce
• Refer interested employers
20
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public Sector Learner Services
• Analyse and understand the National, regional and sub-regional market
• Ensure intermediaries clearly understand Apprenticeship offer and how online VMS works
• Promote Apprenticeships
• Strengthen the Apprenticeship experience and improve attitudes to vocational training
21
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public SectorVacancy Matching Service
• To monitor the submission of vacancies on to the system
• To ensure all vacancies are submitted by a recognised employer and or provider
• Encourage and support training providers to use the VMS
• Publish high level and comprehensive MI reports
• Produce performance reports
22
Expanding Apprenticeships in the Public SectorWho to contact
• Regional Director – Karen Woodward – 07976 716397
• Employer Service Directors:
Sharon Forton 07824 865509 Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire
Henry Inman 077897 46058 Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Rutland, Northamptonshire
• Learner Services Director
Carolyn Savage 07796 941150
23
• National Apprenticeship website and access to the National Apprenticeship Vacancy Matching Service:
www.apprenticeships.org.uk
• National Apprenticeship Service Hotline 08000 150 600
Apprenticeships and the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS)
NAS Vacancy Matching Service
24
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Apprenticeships – part of the culture of the organisation
Ian McBride
Jane Newman
and Apprentices
from the City of Lincoln Council
25
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Introducing WorldSkills UK Competitions
Geoff Hall
Principal and Chief Executive
New College Nottingham
26
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Refreshment break
&
Case study workshops to follow
27
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Plenary Session Panel Members:
Karen Woodward, NAS Regional Director
Tony Belmega, LSC Regional Skills Director
Ian McBride, City of Lincoln Council
Dale Willis, Starting Off
28
East Midlands Public Sector Apprenticeship Summit
Thank you for attending
Please remember your Event Evaluation Form
Lunch and Networking
We wish you a safe journey