"It is patently obvious that we are not connecting with the vast majority of the population" - damning words from Bryan Sanderson, National Chairman of the Learning and Skills Council at a recent lecture, where he urged those involved in post-16 learning to "change the way they think about what they do."
Sanderson's speech, 'Unleashing the tiger - how education and training will transform the UK', came just as the Learning and Skills Council came on stream a few months ago, but the details reveal some interesting thinking taking place behind the scenes.
Sanderson said he was disappointed that the press hadn't covered the launch of the LSC with more enthusiasm, "because learning is something that affects all".
Key to post-16 providers changing their approach, he said, was to put a marketing focus on learning: "We are selling a customer product (personal transformation) where, as an industry, we don’t really know what the customers think, what the customers really want and where as producers of this particular brand of intellectual capital we can say little about the quality or the clarity of our product in terms that might make the consumer want to buy." The key points he made were:
Sanderson said he was optimistic about the future, but said that "we need to move quickly to engage business, to convince them of the relevance and usefulness of learning in terms of their business. And we need to be able to deliver a consistent product the length and breadth of the country." Engaging learners and business was, he said, "a serious matter. There is a lot of public money at stake. There is an even greater mass of human capital at stake".