The government has scrapped a joint T-level in hair and beauty due to roll out in September.
It said it would look at replacing it with a T-level focused just on beauty, which could be introduced “after 2025”.
The Association of Colleges said the announcement was “a huge shock to colleges who have been enrolling students”.
BTecs and other level-three courses taken by thousands of students after their GCSEs will be defunded from August 2024 to make way for T-levels.
It is part of the government’s plan to “streamline further education” and ultimately introduce the Advanced British Standard, which will eventually replace A-levels and T-levels.
But some college principals are worried the removal of alternative courses in the short term will result in a lack of options for students unsuited to T-levels.
T-levels, introduced in 2020, are vocational qualifications aimed at 16-to-19-year-olds, which focus more on practical subjects than academic ones.
Each course lasts two years and is roughly equivalent to three A-levels.
The qualification includes a mixture of both classroom learning and on-the-job experience, with a work placement of at least 315 hours – or about nine weeks – making up roughly 20% of the course.
T-levels are designed to cater for students who want an alternative to A-levels but do not wish to take an apprenticeship, which usually requires as much as 80% of a student’s time to be spent with an employer.
Final grades are based on a combination of exams, coursework and completion of the industry placement.
In 2023, the overall pass rate for the 3,448 students taking the qualification was 90.5% (3,119).
But figures showed that only two-thirds completed the course (5,210 students began a T-level three years ago).
The Department for Education said it was “quite normal” for students to switch to different courses after enrolment, and it is working with providers to understand more about what can be done to improve retention.
The number of T-level courses has expanded each academic year since 2020, with a total of eight subjects sat by students in 2023.
They include accountancy, digital business, finance, healthcare and manufacturing.
T-levels in legal services, and agriculture, land management and production rolled out in September.
They will be followed in 2024 by animal care and management, as well as two delayed T-levels: craft and design, and media, broadcast and production.
A third, in catering, has been delayed until “after 2024”, and a marketing T-level is due to roll out in 2025.
A T-level in hairdressing, barbering and beauty therapy was due to begin in 2023 but was delayed before being scrapped.
Education Minister Robert Halfon said a T-level focused just on beauty could be introduced “after 2025”.
He said feedback from the hair sector was that level-2 or level-3 apprenticeships, or other level-2 qualifications, were “the best route… for learners to progress”.
Catherine Sezen, director of education policy at the Association of Colleges, said: “We have to question why it has taken so long to reach this decision.”
Education Secretary Gillian Keegan has previously said new courses “will only be approved for delivery where we are sure they are good enough and can be delivered to a high standard”.
In 2020 there were more than 12,000 vocational qualifications at all levels, offered by more than 150 awarding bodies, according to Ofqual, which oversees qualifications.
The Department for Education says T-levels were introduced to “streamline” post-16 education and make things less confusing for students and employers.
As T-levels continue to develop, funding will eventually be withdrawn for some other vocational qualifications.
But a report in April 2023 urged the government to delay this plan until T-levels were more established.
When the recent delays were announced, Gillian Keegan said there would be “at least one year” between the introduction of a T-level and the removal of funding for similar qualifications.
Under previous plans there would have been a two-year overlap.
Other vocational courses available in the UK include:
- BTecs (available across the UK)
- NVQs (available in England, Wales and Northern Ireland)
- Scottish Vocational Qualifications (SVQs).
T-level qualifications are equivalent to three A-levels.
Students get one of four grades, ranging from a distinction* to a pass. Their certificate shows their overall grade and lists their experiences on the course.
A distinction* is worth 168 Ucas points – the same as three A*s at A-level – and a merit is equivalent to three Bs at A-level.
For those wanting to go on to higher education, qualifications are accepted by 134 universities and colleges.
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