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LOOKING BACK AT THE WEEK THAT WAS
The main stories from the papers
Reuters: UK pledges 300,000 youth placements after 'lost generation' warning

Guardian: Labour poised for fresh welfare changes after scale of youth jobs crisis revealed

Independent: Youth unemployment crisis costing UK £125bn a year, landmark review warns as more than 1m not in work or education

BBC: Student loans inquiry finds many did not understand terms

Independent: Britain ‘to stop short of full social media ban for under-16s’ and outlaw addictive features instead

BBC: Some A-level papers voided for students after exams leaked online

 
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The latest announcements and policy news
Follow this link to view the full version of Steve Besley's popular policy round-up – including an overview of all the important stories, his top headlines of the week, tweets and posts of note, the most memorable quotes, and all the not-to-be-missed statistics.
GENERAL:
NEET figures. The ONS published the latest unconfirmed NEET figures showing an increase in the number of 16-24 yr olds NEETs for the first quarter of this year to just over 1m for the first time in 13 years.
Childcare costs. The Education Secretary called on the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) to look into how the childcare market was operating and in particular the creep of additional costs for things like nappies and suncream as well as the role of different providers and cost transparency generally, and to report back next spring.
Employment Rights. The Institute of Directors (IoD) called on the government ‘to rethink its approach to the Employment Rights Act,’ arguing it will restrict recruitment and hamper economic growth, proposing instead exemptions for smaller employers and a lengthier implementation schedule generally.


SCHOOLS:
Falling rolls. The House of Lords Public Services Select Committee announced a call for evidence and a series of evidence sessions in June for its ‘short’ inquiry into falling primary school rolls, designed to look at the impact of the fall on schools, academic outcomes, children, and their families and communities.
Financial education. Former PM Rishi Sunak’s Richmond Project which focuses on raising levels of financial literacy, published a new report highlighting gaps in financial literacy across all ages, calling for better financial education from an early age and setting out a best practice model for schools, built around ‘seven core domains’ ranging from saving and investing to risks and scams.
14-16 qualifications. Cambridge OCR announced a review of 14-16 vocational provision to be led again by former Education Secretary Charles Clarke with a report expected later this year.


FE/SKILLS:
NEETs Review. Alan Milburn published his interim report into NEETs and youth employment highlighting a growing crisis of young people without jobs, opportunities and in some cases hope, calling for a ‘radical reset’ to avoid the human and economic costs of ‘a lost generation’ in the future.
Costs of being NEET. The IPPR think tank reported on its recent conversations with young people about the human costs of being NEET, citing four in particular including the fear of being left behind, the loss of routine, a loss of social capital and being unable to move forward.
TUC NEET response. The TUC published its response to the Milburn Review into young people and work, highlighting among other things the number of young people without L2 English and maths and calling on the government to expand the jobs guarantee for young people, reform education funding and drive up apprenticeships.
Skills Network. Skills England explained in a new blog how it will work with stakeholders through an ‘Expert Network’ comprising two ‘time-limited’ groups, an Occupational Group focused on occupational standards and assessment, and an Insight Group focused on wider issues and related decision making.


HE:
Mergers. Universities UK highlighted the impact of current financial pressures on members as it published the results of a recent survey, showing many considering some form of merger/collaboration along with cutting back on staffing, student support and research to help manage such pressures.
Twin threats. The President of HEPI pointed in a new briefing to a sector at risk from two main threats, a decline in the ‘recruitment pool’ of young people notably from 2030, and the emerging impact of ‘predatory recruitment practices’ that could leave non-higher-tariff universities particularly vulnerable.
Student loans. The Treasury Committee summarised the responses to its recent call for evidence for its inquiry into student loans and graduate taxation, showing most of the responses coming from those with a Plan 2 loan and most not happy with the rates of interest and repayment terms involved.
Franchising. The QAA examined its latest data and research on franchising suggesting that rapid growth, particularly by a handful of large-scale providers, rather than franchising itself had created issues of poorer outcomes, arguing that many small providers deliver positive outcomes and that risk identification and intervention should focus on the handful of large-scale providers.
Registration fees. The government launched consultation on the structure of the fee system used by the OfS, including the annual registration fee, calling for views on options such as a flat fee but ‘variable’ on the size of the provider, and charges for other services such as for initial application or for name changes.
AI survey. The OfS and Advance HE announced a new joint survey to understand better the potential and impact of AI on staff and students as well as share good practice and see what else is needed in terms of support with a report due later this year.
Freedom of speech. The OfS reported on its You Gov research into how students viewed freedom of speech, finding most aware that they had some rights in this area although not all were sure what they were, and some were concerned about the consequences of raising contentious topics.
New name. The OfS confirmed that it had approved the use of the word ‘university’ for the University of Greenwich to use in its merger with the University of Kent. It will become ‘London and South East University Group’ once the merger is complete from this August.
Graduate recruitment. The IfS published a new working paper looking at the extent which graduates from top universities were shunning jobs in the public sector in favour of more attractive opportunities in finance, tech and consulting, using evidence from over the past decade to suggest public sector destinations remain ‘important’ for most.
Access all issues of Steve Besley's Education Eye
Research, reports and studies published this week
The role of families in the educational outcomes of children and young people | Social Mobility Commission
Are graduates from the top universities choosing finance and tech over the public sector? | IFS
Intersectionality and modern foreign languages at Key Stage 5 | FFT Education Datalab
Four in ten British adults lack the financial literacy to manage their money, according to new research | The Richmond Project
Demographic decline and predatory recruitment: The twin threats to English higher education into the 2040s | HEPI
Progression from T-levels in health and care | Gatsby Foundation
Vocational education and training (VET), green and STEM jobs: Insights from job vacancy data | OECD
Students’ perceptions of freedom of speech: Student insight report | OfS
Young people and work: interim report | DWP
Tiered systems of support in education: A focus on MTSS | OECD
PISA 2025 Assessment and Analytical Framework | OECD
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COMING UP IN THE NEXT WEEK
Important reports, deadlines and government events
Parliament returns (Monday 1 June)
Education Committee evidence session on ‘Reading for Pleasure’ (Tuesday 2 June)
Edge Breaking Barriers Collective event on the NEET crisis (Tuesday 2 June)
Westminster Hall debate on ‘Youth Mental Health Support’ (Wednesday 3 June)
Conferences and CPD opportunities
Tuesday 02 June: Next steps for apprenticeships in England | Westminster Forum (online event)
Tuesday 02 June: Turning Conversations into Enrolments: WhatsApp for Student Recruitment | The PIE (online event)
Tuesday 02 June: Putting Phone-Free Guidance into Practice | ASCL (online event)
Thursday 04 - Friday 05 June: Inspiring Leadership Conference 2026 | NAHT (in-person event)
Saturday 06 June: researchED Bournemouth | researchED (in-person event)
Running an education-related event that you'd like to see included in our calendar? Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with details and a link to the booking info. If we believe it's relevant to our readers we will consider publishing it.
See all upcoming events
A fact for each day
MONDAY 01 JUNE
On this day in 1831 British explorer James Clark Ross discovered the Magnetic North Pole.
 
TUESDAY 02 JUNE
On this day in 1953 Queen Elizabeth II was formally crowned monarch of the United Kingdom in Westminster Abbey.
 
WEDNESDAY 03 JUNE
On this day in 2017 terrorists launched an attack at London Bridge in a gruesome eight-minute period killing eight people.
 
THURSDAY 04 JUNE
On this day in 1783 French inventors, the Montgolfier brothers, demonstrated the first hot air balloon flight.
 
FRIDAY 05 JUNE
On this day in 1988 the Russian Orthodox Church celebrated its 1,000th anniversary.
 
 
 
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