The government yesterday announced plans to reform its sector skills
councils. The move is designed to give employers greater opportunity to shape
skills, employment programmes and vocational qualifications to better ensure the
UK has the high-end skills employers are demanding.
Karen Price, chief executive of E-skills
UK, the skills council for the IT sector, welcomed the move, claiming it
would help ensure that students are gaining the high-tech skills businesses
require.
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"We are delighted that the Government has responded to the recommendations of
the
Leitch
Review by placing employers at the heart of skills development; introducing
a demand-led approach to skills that focuses on aligning learning with employer
needs, and including a commitment to direct funding to the qualifications that
best meet those needs," Price said. "We look forward to working with employers
and partners to take this forward for IT and Telecoms."
The boost to the sector skills councils is just one of a package of measures
included in the government's new report on implementing the recommendations of
last year's Leitch Review into the skills the UK will need to be competitive in
2020.
The World Class
Skills report also announced plans for a new UK Commission for Employment
and Skills; an expansion of the Train
to Gain employer support service; and an initiative to encourage
universities to focus more on "workforce development".
IT vendors are also likely to support new plans to make it easier for
businesses to have their own training schemes officially accredited.
Meanwhile, employees will be given access to a range of new adult careers
service and an increase in the funding entitlement for adults to free basic
training.
Price said the focus on developing economically valuable skills and
co-operating more with the higher education sector would prove particularly
valuable in helping the UK tackle its ongoing IT skills crisis.
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