Inside Your Ed

Tom Richmond

This podcast takes a look inside the latest stories from across the education system in England including schools, colleges, universities and apprenticeships. Hosted by Tom Richmond.

  1. 4월 14일

    If the student loan system is the problem, is a 'graduate tax' the solution?

    “We have concluded the disadvantages are such that we do not support a graduate tax” So said Lord Dearing in his landmark review of Higher Education, or HE funding in 1997, shortly before tuition fees were first introduced. Over a decade later, Lord Browne’s review of HE funding in 2010 also rejected calls for a graduate tax before going on to propose a significant uplift in tuition fees. Here we are, over a decade on from the Browne Review, and yet again a graduate tax is being proposed by some commentators as the solution to the financial woes facing the HE sector, particularly as opposition to the current student loan system grows by the day. A graduate tax would essentially mean that rather than a graduate paying back the cost of their HE course through student loan repayments when they are in work, graduates would instead pay an extra tax on top of their income tax and these extra payments would depend purely on their income level rather than the actual cost of their HE course. So what makes a graduate tax look appealing relative to a student loan system? Would students, universities and the government be better or worse off if a graduate tax was implemented? And, crucially, do the reasons that led to a graduate tax being rejected in the past still hold true today?  My guests are Professor John Blake, director of the Post-18 project, and Jonathan Simons, a Partner and Head of the Education Practice at Public First. CLICK HERE TO BROWSE INSIDE YOUR ED'S BACK CATALOGUE FOLLOW INSIDE YOUR ED ON LINKEDIN OR TWITTER / X

    38분
  2. 2025. 12. 18.

    To V or not to V - that is the question....

    In January 2025, I recorded an episode of Inside Your Ed titled ‘Will the debate over vocational and technical qualifications ever end?’. It is therefore rather fitting that my final podcast of 2025 will prove beyond all reasonable doubt that this debate shows no sign of ending anytime soon. In November this year, the independent Curriculum and Assessment Review proposed the creation of V levels - a new set of vocational qualifications for 16 to 19 year olds that are intended to sit between academic A levels and technical T levels. The Government accepted this recommendation and has since launched a consultation on the design and implementation of V levels in order to get these new qualifications ready for September 2027.  So what problems are V levels supposed to solve? What opportunities and risks lie ahead for learners and providers with this new brand of qualifications? And will V levels be seen as a prestigious choice for young people or will they struggle to compete with A levels and T levels in terms of their visibility and profile? My guests are Professor Dame Alison Wolf DBE, the Sir Roy Griffiths Professor of Public Sector Management at Kings College London and author of a government review of vocational qualifications in 2011, and Shaun Hope, the principal of Bishop Auckland College, which delivers further education, vocational training and higher education to over 4,000 students across Durham.   CLICK HERE TO BROWSE INSIDE YOUR ED'S BACK CATALOGUE FOLLOW INSIDE YOUR ED ON LINKEDIN OR TWITTER / X

    32분

소개

This podcast takes a look inside the latest stories from across the education system in England including schools, colleges, universities and apprenticeships. Hosted by Tom Richmond.

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