The Guardian view on post-16 qualifications: the case for V-levels replacing BTecs is unproven | Editorial

2 hours ago 11

The government’s granting of a stay of execution to popular courses including health and business studies BTecs, while alternatives are developed, is a victory for common sense. It should not have taken a years‑long campaign by the college sector to prevent the over‑hasty defunding of qualifications that are taken by more than 200,000 students each year in England and Wales. Belatedly, the government has admitted as much. Jacqui Smith, the skills minister, said that the previous timetable was “too aggressive”.

Welcome though this admission is, the problems with this package of reforms to 16-19 education go beyond the timetable. Other questionable decisions remain to be either justified or unpicked. The most important of these is the replacement of numerous existing diplomas with brand-new V-levels, which are being designed as A-level-size equivalents, with a view to enabling students to mix and match (for example, studying an education V-level alongside sociology and drama A-levels). Education is one of the first three V-levels due to be launched, along with finance and digital, next year.

Whether V-levels will really be an improvement on the current offer no one knows, since they do not yet exist. It is very difficult to imagine a new A-level syllabus being put together in such a rush. But ministers have committed themselves to a simpler, tripartite system. They cite polling evidence from 2024 in support of their view that the current landscape of post-16 options is too complicated.

There is no doubt that a menu of T-levels, V-levels and A-levels sounds neater than the current assortment of applied general qualifications – BTecs being the best-known brand. And last year’s curriculum review, led by Prof Becky Francis, gave V-levels an expert stamp of approval. But 16-19 education is complicated, taking in a huge range of skills and subjects, as well as crucial English and maths GCSE resits, and this is not the first time that ministers have changed course in response to feedback. The latest rethink came after a survey of school and college leaders was shared with ministers. The vast majority thought that plans to scrap existing courses would lead to more young people becoming Neets (not in education, employment or training).

Improving the range of opportunities that are open to young people who do not have the GCSE results to study A-levels is essential. While the new T-levels were well-intentioned, their combination of tight specialism and level of difficulty means that there are many young people for whom they are not the right choice. In 2025, just 27,000 students began a T-level. But far from admitting that the flagship technical education reform of the last decade has not gone as planned, the Department for Education appears more inclined to double down. It has taken a huge effort from the Protect Student Choice campaign to force this climbdown.

College heads and other experts remain concerned about the pace of change, but also the direction. Why, in future, must all courses be equivalent to a single A-level? Why shouldn’t extended diplomas carry on? And why the new emphasis on occupational standards, when previously many BTec students have gone to university?

Warnings about the harmful long-term consequences of the current pattern of high youth unemployment and economic inactivity mean that ministers cannot afford to get these reforms wrong. They need to keep listening.

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