Learn these three key lessons as Yorkshire students celebrate A-Level results – The Yorkshire Post says
Yet, as the more academically-gifted prepare for university, it is significant that more than half of young people believe they will have to retrain at some stage in their career.
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Hide AdNo business can expect to perform to its optimum if it has such a high turnover of chief executives – and the need for consistency is also applicable to the Department for Education.
However it is the needs of industry which should be dictating policy, and reform, if more young people are to use their education to lead successful lives.
This means business leaders – and others – having a far greater input into the curriculum so there is more emphasis on those skills that will be fundamental to the future fortunes of students, irrespective of whether their degree paves the way for a well-remunerated job.
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Hide AdIt also requires more focus on the benefits of apprenticeships and vocational learning – on-the-job training can be just as insightful, if not more so, than a degree. It is certainly more financial rewarding, given it negates the need for tuition fees that leave recipients facing potentially decades of debt.
And it necessitates the need for all schools and students to be able to access the very best careers advice rather than this guidance being left to chance.
If Mr Williamson is sufficiently open-minded to learn these three lessons now, and take the necessary steps, the county’s economic foundations – which begin in schools – will be all the stronger as a result.