Miliband vows vocational shake-up to help 'forgotten 50 per cent'

Ed Miliband Ed Miliband

A Labour government would carry out the biggest shake-up of vocational education for a generation to create a "gold standard" qualification to stand alongside the A-level for the 50% of young people who do not go to university, Ed Miliband will say on Tuesday.

The Technical Baccalaureate - or TechBacc - would be awarded at 18 to youngsters who complete a programme of work experience, school-based vocational training and academic courses in English and Maths. It would be coupled with a major boost in apprenticeships to provide a pathway to success for the "forgotten 50%" whose needs have been neglected by successive governments, the Labour leader will say.

In a highly personal keynote speech to the Labour conference in Manchester, Mr Miliband will draw on his own memories of comprehensive schooling in north London and speak about classmates failed by the education system because they were not suited to academic exams and university.

"For years and years, our party has focused on those young people who go to university. And that matters," Mr Miliband will say.

"But it's time now to focus on those who don't go to university. The young people who are too often the forgotten 50%. We cannot succeed if we can have an education system which only works for half the country."

And he will add: "In the 21st century everyone should be doing some form of education up to 18, not 16. That gives us the chance and the obligation to develop a new system from 14 to 18, in particular, for vocational qualifications. I want a curriculum that is rigorous and relevant with English and Maths up to 18, not 16, culminating in a new technical baccalaureate at 18 based on gold standard qualifications."

Under Labour's plans, businesses would be given control of the £1 billion-a-year Government funding for apprenticeships, coming together in regional or sectoral groups to buy the training they need. The civil service would introduce a fast track route for apprentices similar to the one already in place for graduates, and Government contracts would be awarded on the condition that the firms involved are providing apprenticeships.

Mr Miliband will seek to draw a contrast between his TechBacc plan and the EBacc qualification proposed by Education Secretary Michael Gove, which Labour believes threatens to revive two-tier academic exams at 16. Arguing that EBaccs will replicate the old system of O-levels and CSEs which "just wrote a whole set of people off", Mr Miliband will say: "We don't want to go back to that."

And he will accuse Mr Gove of having "contempt for vocational qualifications (and) nothing to say about education beyond 16."

Mr Miliband will say: "He is stuck in the past, offering no vision for the 21st century. There is a choice of two futures for education. The Tory plan for an education system designed for a narrower and narrower elite. Or our plan."

Comments(10)

keepitreel says...
11:30pm Tue 2 Oct 12

we had this system years ago and got dumped by previous goverments,what happend to the "every one should go to university" mantra from his old boss?,and will these jobs come from thin air,or will all the eastern europeans who take the jobs our less than bright school leavers allways filled all suddenly up sticks and go home? he can say what ever he likes he has no powers to do anything,funny WATTS hasn't been on saying what a good idea it is.

mikeperry109 says...
1:31am Wed 3 Oct 12

A total embarrassment - all rhetoric and no substance tied up with sentimental twaddle. The manwas part of a failed government and he seems to forget this.

pitbullboxing says...
5:29pm Wed 3 Oct 12

Another comment removed which does not violate the house rules in any way shape or form. I think I need to meet up with Mr Kilmurray and ask him why.

Sankey says...
1:12pm Fri 5 Oct 12

I thought Millband's speach indicated loud and clear labour has moved from the centre to the left. Thjis is the real meaning of one nation the government micro manages everything. The fact the bruvers were delighted says everything. The Labour faithful will love it but electoral suicide for the population at large. Tories cant believe their luck.

mikeperry109 says...
2:36pm Fri 5 Oct 12

They had 13 years in power to cater for the "forgotten 50 per cent". They did nothing except dumb down GCSEs so that everyone could pass. Miliband was part of that government, first as adviser, then as a minister. Never had a real job, like the majority of Labour MPs, hnows nothing of real life, and pretends to be in touch. What a waste of space! His father was a Marxist academic - he would weep to see his son now.

Sankey says...
5:54pm Fri 5 Oct 12

Milliband went to Haverstock a very elite school (albeit a comprehensive) then to Harvard and Oxford. He lives in a £1.6 million pound house (inherited wealth) a long long way from a St Helens comprensive and the sink estates. For myself I really could not give a **** what school they went to or how much money they have what I care about is who will get us out of this mess? That seems to have bypassed milliband who is gambling on class hatred and hatred of the banks to be elected in three years when the economy could be recovering. He has made a serious miscalculation but he needs to keep the unions onside. This is a difficult balancing act and cowardly he is siding with the unions which gives him an easy life but makes him unelectable I could not care less what the polls say in 2012 its 2015 that matters.

chasmcn says...
10:00pm Fri 5 Oct 12

Sankey wrote:
Milliband went to Haverstock a very elite school (albeit a comprehensive) then to Harvard and Oxford. He lives in a £1.6 million pound house (inherited wealth) a long long way from a St Helens comprensive and the sink estates. For myself I really could not give a **** what school they went to or how much money they have what I care about is who will get us out of this mess? That seems to have bypassed milliband who is gambling on class hatred and hatred of the banks to be elected in three years when the economy could be recovering. He has made a serious miscalculation but he needs to keep the unions onside. This is a difficult balancing act and cowardly he is siding with the unions which gives him an easy life but makes him unelectable I could not care less what the polls say in 2012 its 2015 that matters.
This is the real meaning of one nation it is a anagram of No Etonian

what i like to see a tory on the run the tories have not won a election in the last 20 years ,they have no chance in 2015 iam looking forward to next week to see the tories tear themselves apart at thier conference reminds me of labour in the early 80,s .Iam glad milliband has moved to the left just watch him pick up those lib dem votes that left labour at the last election .

Sankey says...
10:49am Sat 6 Oct 12

We are and have been for some time Chasmcn two nations. The public sector and welfare and those who run businesses or work in the private sector. Two cultures and two sets of rules apply in each. Labour’s traditional voter was the working man in industry that disappeared several decades ago and the working man today is likely to be an eastern European with none of the historical and tribal labour cultures. Labour realised this some years ago and built up a client state by overspending on the public sector and allowing welfare to be a way of life for millions. If you look today millions of people are starting to work for themselves in small business simply because to a large extent employers don’t exist. These people will quickly find out the state puts barriers in the way of creating enterprise and are not likely to be labour voters. The state employees and welfare are likely to be less going forward simply because the state has run out of money. Yes Milliband short term may pick up a few lib dem voters but longer term I cannot see where their voting base will be. We may get a far left coalition between the lib dems and labour but that would set our economy back decades. In my view a proper Tory party or a new party altogether is the only credible solution to our mess we cannot regulate heavily and spend our way out of this crisis we will end up in a bigger mess a few years down the line. We have no economy no industry and the country has run out of money. We have to create new industry and trade our way out no other way than that.

pitbullboxing says...
3:55pm Sat 6 Oct 12

chasmcn wrote:
Sankey wrote:
Milliband went to Haverstock a very elite school (albeit a comprehensive) then to Harvard and Oxford. He lives in a £1.6 million pound house (inherited wealth) a long long way from a St Helens comprensive and the sink estates. For myself I really could not give a **** what school they went to or how much money they have what I care about is who will get us out of this mess? That seems to have bypassed milliband who is gambling on class hatred and hatred of the banks to be elected in three years when the economy could be recovering. He has made a serious miscalculation but he needs to keep the unions onside. This is a difficult balancing act and cowardly he is siding with the unions which gives him an easy life but makes him unelectable I could not care less what the polls say in 2012 its 2015 that matters.
This is the real meaning of one nation it is a anagram of No Etonian

what i like to see a tory on the run the tories have not won a election in the last 20 years ,they have no chance in 2015 iam looking forward to next week to see the tories tear themselves apart at thier conference reminds me of labour in the early 80,s .Iam glad milliband has moved to the left just watch him pick up those lib dem votes that left labour at the last election .
Alright calm down calm down!! If they are so poor (and I think they are) how come Labour didn't pan them in the last election? Wouldn't that make them even worse? and you do know there was more publicly educated Labour mp's in their last government than this coalition one don't you?
Personally I couldn't care who gets in at the next election - unless it's not one of the main three!

smith&weston says...
5:57pm Sun 7 Oct 12

You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink. One only has to look at the droves of kids wandering around the town centre on a school day when they should be in school to realise that some kids simply don't want an education. Teachers explain to them how it will help them gain qualifications that could lead to better employment prospects but too many of them only want to make money the easy way, which by and large is through crime and criminal acts.

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