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More than one in four students who start T-level courses do not complete them

More than one in four students who start T-level courses do not complete them

About 16,081 students began two-year T-level courses in 2023, but just 11,724 completed their course and were assessed, according to provisional data from the Department for Education (DfE).
Nearly three out of four (73%) completed the technical qualifications, which is up on last year when 71% finished their courses, the figures suggest.
Students in England have received their T-level results in the fourth year that the qualification has been awarded.
Overall, 11,909 students in England were awarded results on Thursday for the Government's technical qualification, which was introduced to be broadly equivalent to three A-levels.
Across all 18 T-level subjects, 91.4% of students achieved at least a pass.
The DfE said learners can elect to complete the T-level course over two or more academic years.
Skills minister Baroness Jacqui Smith of Malvern suggested there is still work the Government can do in its rollout of the qualification.
She told the PA news agency: 'There are higher pass rates at T-levels, and there are fewer students who aren't getting through to the end.
'But this is still a relatively new subject where teachers are new to it, where the curriculum is relatively new, and where students are finding their way through it.
'So although there's enormous success for students who take T-levels, and it's being increasingly recognised as a gold standard technical education, there's still work that we can do and will do to deliver the professional development for teachers, for example.
'To make sure that the assessment is right, rigorous but manageable for T-levels, and of course to make sure that the thing that T-level students always tell me they really enjoy about their T-levels – the industry placements – are there and available for them to complete.'
The number of T-level entries in England has increased by 61.4% on last year, while the number of A-level entries has fallen by 0.5% compared to 2024.
Sir Ian Bauckham, chief regulator of Ofqual, England's exams regulator, said there are 'some significant changes' taking place in the 18-year-old cohort this year.
He told PA: 'T-levels are intended to be a high-quality, rigorous, full-time level-three course for students to prepare them directly for a particular occupational field.
'The extent to which they draw from people who might have done A-levels, or might have done other vocational and technical qualifications, is very hard to demonstrate because we don't know what people would have done had T-levels not existed.'
Sir Ian added: 'I'm confident that T-level entries will continue to rise in the years ahead.
'Clearly when students make one choice over another then the shape of the cohort that they're not choosing – so in this case the shape of the A-level cohort – will be affected.'
More than 250,000 results were also issued to students who took level 3 vocational and technical qualifications (VTQs) this year, which include BTecs.
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Warning over ‘decade of decline' for one of England's precious chalk streams
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time2 hours ago

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Warning over ‘decade of decline' for one of England's precious chalk streams

Monitoring at five sites on the River Avon, which flows through Wiltshire and Hampshire, over the past 10 years by conservation charity WildFish has found a significant decline in wildlife such as freshwater shrimps, mayflies, caddisflies, beetles and aquatic bugs. WildFish said the declines in invertebrates showed the Government was not doing enough to protect precious chalk streams – even ones such as the Avon, which have the highest conservation status. The charity is calling for government bodies such as the Environment Agency and Natural England to 'raise the bar' by setting more ambitious environmental standards to assess the health of what should be wildlife-rich chalk streams. The monitoring, carried out in partnership with the Wiltshire Fishery Association as part of the SmartRivers citizen science project, reveals the diversity of invertebrates fell by 17% and numbers were down by more than three quarters (77%) in average annual counts between 2015 and 2024. The situation for riverflies, which are sensitive to pollution and a good indicator for the wider health of the river ecosystem, was even worse, with the monitoring revealing the diversity of the Avon's riverfly species had fallen by 25% and average abundance of the insects was down 83% in 10 years. Despite the declines, official assessments under the statutory water framework directive found the monitored sites all scored as high quality for invertebrates in 2015 and were still high or good quality in 2024. Chalk streams have clear, flowing water fed from underground chalk aquifers and springs (Alamy/PA) WildFish's Dr Janina Gray warns the statutory standards set the bar too low to reflect the high levels of invertebrate life which a healthy chalk stream should support. As a result, the official monitoring can conclude all is well in the river despite major declines in key species, and make action and investment to protect them more difficult, she warned. Chalk streams, with their clear, flowing water fed from underground chalk aquifers and springs, provide habitat for an array of wildlife including Atlantic salmon, brown trout and water crowfoot, as well as water resources for people. There are only around 200 in the world, most of them found in the southern half of England, making them an internationally rare habitat. But they are suffering from 'death by a million cuts', according to Dr Gray, with pressures on water quality driven by nutrient pollution, sediment and chemicals from water treatment works, agriculture, and road run-off. They are also threatened by over-abstraction of water, reducing the flows in the river and making pollution more concentrated. Dr Gray, head of science and policy at WildFish, told the PA news agency: 'The Avon is a SAC, it's the most protected river we have, and yet the abundance drops that we're seeing are dramatic in that time period. 'It's just about hanging in there.' She added: 'It just shows that the bar is not set high enough to properly protect chalk streams.' And she warned: 'These ecosystems are globally rare and ecologically critical, but without immediate action, we risk causing irreversible damage to the very characteristics that make them so important.' All chalk streams should be designated as Special Areas of Conservation (SAC), WildFish argues, joining the handful of such waterways which already have the classification. And current assessments and protections do not go far enough and need to be properly enforced. 'We would like the Environment Agency and Natural England to revise the standards for chalk streams to raise the bar to protect them,' Dr Gray said. A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said: 'Within this new government, our top priority is to clean Britain's rivers and restore them from years of damage. Chalk stream restoration is a vital part of this effort. 'We have secured £2 billion of funding from water companies to start cleaning them, while modernising the abstraction licensing system to ensure water is used sustainably and to stop damaging abstraction practises to the environment – a problem particularly pronounced in chalk streams. 'This is part of our wider plan to rebuild the water system, including a record £104 billion investment to halve sewage spills by 2030 and the creation of a new, powerful regulator.'

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