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Post-GCSE dropout fears despite predictions of success

Published: 23rd Aug 2011 14:24:03

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Thousands of GCSE students risk being lost to the education system because of a unique set of pressures, experts say.

Cuts to careers advice, the EMA support grant and fears over university fees, could lead many teenagers to drop out after they get their results on Thursday, they warn.

Brian Lightman of heads' union, ASCL, said heads faced a tough job to persuade pupils to stay on.

The government wants to target support at those who need it most.

But it is yet to comment on the claims over a potential increase in dropouts.

The warning comes as record GCSE results are predicted when they are released on Thursday.

Mr Lightman said: "The good news is we will have a very good set of results. This crop of students has studied extremely hard.

But he warned: "Sixteen-year-olds are facing unprecedented challenges at the moment as they hear a torrent of messages about the difficulty of accessing university places, increased tuition fees and youth unemployment.

"At the same time support services such as the Education Maintenance Allowance, Aim Higher and face-to-face careers guidance have been cut back."

Last week official figures revealed that one on five - or nearly one million - young people aged between 16 and 24 were labelled as Neet - not in education, employment or training.

Mr Lightman continued: "The very real challenge that we will face is to convince them that staying on in education or training is the right thing to do, rather than dropping out and going for a very basic job.

"There are lots of people who are capable of aiming quite high but who will be questioning whether it is worth it."

He added that pupils were now having incredible difficulty in accessing good careers and advice services.

Careers advice has become a vital part of preventing thousands of 16 and 17-year-olds from becoming lost to the system”

"Precisely what pupils need at this time is good face-to-face guidance to give them a route through the incredibly complex range of options."

He warned that 16-year-olds who had just completed their GCSEs could easily become confused and disheartened. Teenagers today felt "deeply unsettled", he claimed.

"What they need at this age of life is to be given confidence and hope - they have been told by all of us that working hard pays off," he added.

His fears were echoed by Paul Chubb, head of careers services body Careers England, who said the tough job market coupled with significant changes in government policy on support for young people was making things difficult for them.

He said many local authorities were already running down their careers services, known as Connexions, because they are ceasing to have a statutory duty to provide them from next year.

Instead that duty will pass to schools, who are being given no extra money to provide them. On a national level, pupils will only being offered careers advice online and over the telephone.

Mr Chubb said young people needed a "helping hand" from careers advisers with extensive local knowledge to book job interviews and appointments for them, adding that cutting this would be "heartless".

"If they don't get the results they hoped for then young people can become very concerned and anxious. The last thing we need is for young people not to be helped.

Sixteen-year-olds will compete with 18-year-olds who have A-levels but did not get into university”

"What careers services and Connexions services have become first class at is identifying those youngsters most at risk of giving up by keeping in touch with them and persistently and gently cajoling them.

"This careers advice has become a vital part of preventing thousands of 16 and 17-year-olds from becoming lost to the system. They are incredibly vulnerable at this time.

"Who is going to do that now that in many places careers centres are closing and thousands of staff are losing their jobs," he added.

And there are warnings of a squeeze on A-level and other post-GCSE courses, as tens of thousands of university rejects are set to return to college to boost their grades next year.

Dan Taubman, of the University and College Union's lecturers' union, said the pressure on courses would be unprecedented.

"Sixteen-year-olds will compete with 18-year-olds who have A-levels but did not get into university."

Joy Mercer, policy director at the Association of Colleges, said: "At this time there is a lot of what seems to be very depressing news out there.

"But there are also lots of opportunities. What we feel is that every young person should have a right to have someone to take them through it."

Source:
BBC NewsExternal LinkShow Citation

Harvard Citation

BBC News, 2011. Post-GCSE dropout fears despite predictions of success. [Online] (Updated 23 Aug 2011)
Available at: http://www.ukwirednews.com/news.php/179973-Post-GCSE-dropout-fears-despite-predictions-of-success [Accessed 16th May 2013]
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