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Are Trailblazers struggling to reform training?

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Comments

  1. This concept of trailblazers will be a total failure Also it will be out of step with other world apprenticeship schemes.

  2. The advantage of the trailblazer apprenticeships when approved is that they are directly owned by the employers.

    But CITB’s record on apprenticeships has not been great lately. Last year 7500 apprenticeships completed their apprenticeships and for an organisation with 1400 people that works out at 5 apprentices per member of staff. Not exactly world class. So there is nothing wrong in trying to do things another way. The result cannot be any worse.

    The more models the better and as long as they all have parity of esteem then the only winners will be the apprentices and the industry.

  3. ‘The fear is that BIS has set up a system that requires considerable input from construction employers, but then allows their work to be rejected by a ministerial panel, on the advice of BIS civil servants with no construction expertise.’
    From my days working as a field officer within CITB during the YTS Apprentice years, the old Manpower Services Commission (prior to it becoming a network of 72 Training & Enterprise Councils who were replaced by the Learning & Skills Councils who were replaced by the Skills Funding Agency) also had a huge network of advisors and monitors who also had no background, experience or qualifications to pass judgement on construction training. And yet they did. This is what government does it seems: spend its money on high visibility control mechanisms and interventions which don’t add value or move anything forward, but do keep a lot of civil servants busy!

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