10 Nov 2008
New research shows vocational qualifications are route to higher wages
A radical new advisory service will combine skills and training advice with practical guidance for people on how to overcome the barriers they face in getting on in life, Skills Secretary John Denham set out today.
For the first time, the adult advancement and careers service (AACS) will
provide a one-stop-shop for those seeking training and help into work but who
also face problems in areas like childcare, money matters, housing and
disability issues. Publishing a prospectus setting out how the new service will develop, Mr
Denham announced the names and locations of ten prototype advisory services
across England whose work will inform the launch of the AACS in 2010. The service, which will be freely available to all but targeted at those most
in need, will play a key role in boosting social mobility - empowering people to
access the opportunities they need to realise their ambitions, improve their
lives and those of their families.
Mr Denham believes that although for most people, information about training
courses and skills development is easily accessible, many such as the low paid
and unemployed continue to face barriers which hold them back.
Previous research has shown that many people face significant barriers to
accessing opportunities to get into and on at work. These include:
- Women seeking to return to work after having a child who cannot find
suitable childcare at an appropriate place and time: 41% of mothers cite time
due to work and 74% cite time due to family care as the largest barrier to
training;
- Those with full time caring responsibilities: an estimated 1 in 5 carers
have left or turned down a job because of caring responsibilities;
- Employees of small firms which can find it hard to provide skills
development support for its staff.
He said:
"Everyone deserves the best chance to get on in work and in life - but often
people find a range of barriers in their way, whether they are seeking work,
trying to get a better job, or worried about redundancy.
"Those barriers are different for everyone - whether finding suitable
childcare, understanding employment rights, unblocking problems with housing -
and the new service needs to be able to help people tackle them all, changing
with them as they change through life.
"To make that happen, services must come together and work in new ways to
make sure people seeking advice are seen as individuals, that all their
particular needs are fully understood and that advice is provided that draws
together everything they need."
The ten prototypes will run for two years, testing a range of different
approaches in establishing local partnerships bringing together nextstep
services, Jobcentre Plus, unionlearn, local authorities, housing associations,
voluntary and community sector organisations, Connexions, Primary Care Trusts,
the Citizen's Advice Bureau, Sure Start Children's Centres, and others.
Research has also shown that accessing learning, improving skills,
undertaking work-based training and/or gaining a qualification can have a
positive affect on people's lives and those of their families.
Evidence shows that improving the skills of adults with poor reading and
writing skills gives their children a better start in education and means they
are less likely to fall behind their classmates at school. In a recent
evaluation of Train to Gain, the Government's flagship skills service, 43 per
cent of people who had completed their training reported a pay rise whilst 30
per cent reported a promotion.
Today, DIUS publishes further research evidence concluding that adults who
gain a vocational qualification at GCSE level are more likely to go on to
further learning, leading in turn to higher wages. This research adds to a
wealth of other evidence that learning new skills and gaining qualifications is
an excellent way of getting on in the labour market, increasing people's chances
of gaining employment and progressing once in work.
The Government first set out its aim to create a single advice service on
learning, work and life last year and when it pledged to establish a nationwide
adult advancement and careers service by 2010, working with Jobcentre Plus.
Mr Denham has also pledged that existing careers services would act now to
help people facing redundancy in the current difficult time.
He said:
"We have already announced a package of support to help small and medium
sized businesses provide training to their employees in the face of the
difficult times we are entering. We are also this week publishing a leaflet with
DWP showing what support is available now to help people facing redundancy. Our
current careers advice services play a key role in this, providing flexible,
personalised advice on dealing with redundancy, refreshing your skills or
learning new ones, applying for and getting jobs."
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