- A-levels and T-levels will be replaced by the new Advanced British Standard qualification.
- Primary school kids will be the first ones to take the qualifying exam.
- The reforms only apply to England because education policy is decentralized.
A-levels and T-levels will be replaced by the new Advanced British Standard qualification, which will allow pupils to mix academic and vocational components, for all school-leavers in England.
Primary school kids will be the first ones to take the qualifying exam. To assist, more teachers will be hired, according to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
T-levels and A-levels
The new baccalaureate-style qualification would equalize technical and academic education, ensure that all students graduated from high school with a solid foundation in arithmetic and English, and provide further support for those who needed it.
Sunak offered instructors special bonuses worth up to £30,000 for the first five years of their careers, tax-free, to entice and keep them. In addition, he pledged an additional £600 million over the course of two years to finance students taking mandatory GCSE retakes in math and English at colleges.
Due to a considerable shortage of students enrolling in secondary school teacher preparation, bursaries are already available in various secondary disciplines.
Following feedback, the ideas may be implemented as early as 2033 or 2034. A-levels and the new T-levels, which are the equivalent of three A-levels, will continue to be options for post-16 pupils. The reforms only apply to England because education policy is decentralized.
According to Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, the difficulty of the teacher recruitment and retention crisis makes it difficult to implement these ideas.
He claimed that despite significant teacher shortages, the proposed bonus payouts would not come close to being adequate. To solve the issue, a more comprehensive plan that enhances pay, working conditions, and educational funding is required.