For much of the last decade, conversations about quality in FE and Skills have often centred on achievement - achievement rates, retention rates, and timely completion.
These measures remain important, and inspectors continue to evaluate them carefully. However, this week’s analysis suggest that something broader is emerging. Across the latest inspections, Ofsted appears increasingly interested in a wider set of questions around who is participating and progressing, and who is being left behind due to barriers to success.
Last week’s reports reflect how participation, progression and inclusion are increasingly important indicators of quality within FE and Skills provision.
This week's reports present a largely positive picture. Most providers achieved Expected standard, with one provider achieving a number of Strong judgements.
Other points of note:
What is interesting is where inspectors chose to focus their commentary. Rather than concentrating solely on qualification achievement, the narrative in the reports relates to:
One of the clearest themes that is apparent again this week is the evolving nature of inclusion. Historically, inspection discussions around inclusion have often focused primarily on SEND support. While this remains important, the reports suggest that inspectors are now considering a broader range of barriers.
These include:
In one report, inspectors highlighted how leaders effectively support learners who face multiple barriers to participation, ensuring that learners gain confidence and remain engaged in learning.
Another provider was praised because, “Learners quickly gain the skills to use IT with confidence.”
This may seem like a simple observation, but it reflects a much wider issue. In an increasingly digital society, digital confidence is no longer simply a desirable skill. It is increasingly becoming a prerequisite for employment, progression and participation.
Perhaps the strongest theme across the reports is the emphasis placed on progression. Inspectors repeatedly refer not only to learners completing programmes, but to the impact those programmes have on their lives and careers.
In one particularly strong example, inspectors note that learners, “gain promotion at work and substantial increases in salary.”
Elsewhere, inspectors highlight learners who:
This reflects a growing emphasis within both policy and inspection. Success is increasingly being viewed through the lens of progression rather than participation alone.
The question is no longer just, "Did learners complete?" It is more about what changed because they did.
A recurring theme across several reports is the importance of digital confidence and digital participation. Providers are increasingly supporting learners who have limited digital skills, lack confidence using technology, or have had limited exposure to digital systems.
This is particularly relevant given Ofsted’s recently published Areas of Research Interest, which highlight:
For FE and Skills providers, this presents both an opportunity and a challenge. Digital skills are no longer a standalone curriculum topic. They are increasingly becoming part of the inclusion agenda. Providers that successfully develop learners’ digital confidence are often helping them overcome wider barriers to employment, progression and participation.
One of the more interesting findings this week comes from the contrast between operationally strong provision and strategic oversight. In one report, inspectors recognised that apprentices achieve well and that support arrangements are effective.
However, they also noted that leaders, “do not proactively use progress and achievement evidence to make strategic decisions about inclusive practices.”
The issue was not a lack of data, and it wasn't poor outcomes. The issue was whether leaders were using information strategically enough to shape future improvement.
This aligns closely with themes emerging from the new Ofsted Inspection Toolkit, which places increasing emphasis on leaders having an “accurate and evidence-based understanding" of their provision.
Across many of the reports reviewed this year, the distinction between stronger and weaker judgements is rarely about whether data exists. It is increasingly about whether leaders can explain:
The strongest provider this week demonstrated several characteristics that appear repeatedly in stronger reports:
Support is targeted, responsive and regularly reviewed.
Leaders understand what success looks like beyond programme completion.
Improvement activity is informed by performance information and learner feedback.
Programmes are closely aligned to employment and career progression opportunities.
Leaders monitor the effectiveness of support and make adjustments where required.
Inspectors repeatedly reference impact rather than activity. Support is not judged solely on whether it exists, it is judged on whether it improves outcomes.
The reports this week raise some important questions for leaders and boards.
Who is participating in our provision, and who is not?
Which learner groups experience different outcomes?
How effectively are we identifying and removing barriers to participation?
Are learners progressing into employment, promotion or further learning?
Can we demonstrate the impact of our support and intervention strategies?
These questions align closely with the direction of travel outlined within the Inspection Toolkit and Ofsted’s wider research priorities.
This week’s analysis suggests that the conversation around quality in FE and Skills is continuing to evolve. Achievement remains important, however, the reports suggest that inspectors are increasingly interested in what happens next.
The strongest inspection commentary focused not simply on learners accessing provision, but on learners progressing because of it, and:
Moving into employment.
Securing promotion.
Increasing earnings.
Developing confidence.
Accessing opportunities that were previously unavailable to them.
In that sense, participation is becoming the starting point from which achievement, progression and wider life chances are judged. The strongest providers are not simply helping learners complete programmes. They are helping learners move forward.
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