Friday, 24 April 2009

Vice Chair of RLP - Dave Thompson


Vice -Chair of the Yorkshire and Humber Regional Learner Panel - Dave Thompson (Advanced Apprentice from Hull)


I'm Dave Thompson, i'm 24 yrs old and currently the Vice Chair of the Regional Learner Panel (Thanks to Jawad). I'm currently undertaking my second Advanced Apprenticeship in Customer Service.

I'm currently employed by the Consortium for Learning who support the Work Based Learning providers from across the Humber-Sub Region.

Due to my involvement with the Regional Learner Panel, i have set up a Apprentice Panel in the Humber-Sub Region, the Humber Apprentice Panel (HAP).

The Apprentice Panel will provide an opportunity for learners to:

• Give there points of views about Work Based Learning, what’s good about it and what’s not so good about it
• Influence the people who make regional policy decisions that affect how Work Based Learning are run in the area
• Give the opportunity to learn some new things about Work Based Learning, how policy works, and how to be part of a successful working group
• Complement the work that the National Learner Panel & Regional Learner Panel are doing
For more information on HAP visit www.humberapprenticepanel.co.uk

Chair of RLP - Jawad Ahmed


Chair of the Yorkshire and Humber Regional Learner Panel - Jawad Ahmen (FE Student from Bradford College)

My name is Jawad Ahmed and I am the Chair of the Yorkshire and the Humber Regional Learners Panel.
I am originally from Pakistan, being a British Citizen through my mother and was born and bred in Karachi. I moved here permanently just over 3 years ago and I am doing my AS Levels at Bradford College in Biology, Chemistry, English Literature and Critical Thinking.
I am the chairman of the student council at Bradford College as well as being a student ambassador and a student member of the corporation.

I joined the Regional Learners Panel when it began last year. I was one of the people who were the original members of the panel, which was a pilot. We had our training in March last year and in our second meeting we discussed our launch event. Our official launch took place at Doncaster College in November, where Caroline Flint MP, Regional Minister for Y&H, Margaret Coleman, Regional Director of LSC and many other influential people in the field of education attended.
We are an advisory panel and are there to advise the government on FE policy though the LSC. Agenda items are brought forward by the LSC who also fund the panel, and any issues brought forward by the panel members themselves are also discussed.

Our aims are simple: to give a learner perspective to the people who shape the rules that effect every learner in the Yorkshire and the Humber Region, to promote learner voice and active learner participation and most of all making sure that the learner voice is heard and taken seriously.

RLP Launch Event

Yorkshire & the Humber Regional Minister Caroline Flint met a group of adult learners ranging from a teenager to an octogenarian when she launched the Regional Learners Panel in Doncaster. The Panel is the first in the country and is being piloted in the region to complement the work of the National Learner Panel set up last year.

Caroline Flint, who took part in an open forum discussion with learners and guests at the College, said: "The launch of this Panel is an exciting and important step in the whole education, learning and skills mix, and I am delighted to attend and to give it my support as Regional Minister.
"The skills agenda is a high priority in Yorkshire and the Humber. One of my priorities is the ten per cent of 16 to 17 years olds not in education, employment or training in the UK live in the Yorkshire and Humber area. We need to urgently address the skills barriers that are preventing these young people from looking for work, or, once in work, preventing them staying and progressing within a job. "This means ensuring that all young people have basic numeracy and literacy skills. "Panel members have an important role to play in influencing their peers, and helping to shape learning opportunities across colleges and the range of work-based and adult community learning resources."

Jawad Ahmed, 19, Chair of the Regional Learners Panel, from Bradford, said: "I joined the Panel hoping that I could have an even more active role and participation in the processes which shape our daily student lives, and by meeting other panel members and members of different organisations. I have realised how much power and influence a person, a young student, can have."John Lawton, of NIACE, National Institute for Adult and Continuing Education, which has organised the event said: "NIACE welcomes this first-ever Regional Learners Panel. The members will be advocates and champions for learners across the region, giving a vital perspective to providers on how and what type of learning is on offer and helping to shape the learning opportunities of the future."

Eighty-nine-year-old Dulcie Eccleston may have left school 75 years ago, but now she is advising Government ministers on how to shape future learning opportunities.Mrs Eccleston, of Market Street, Winterton, is a member of the Regional Learners Panel - the first to be set up in the country. It is a pilot scheme to complement the National Learners Panel, created last year.
She said: "What we need is something for the senior citizens because we are not the sort of people rushing round in our cars."We need facilities where we are based - in our towns and villages. It has to be accessible."Among those the Minister met where Jawad Ahmed, the Chair of the Panel and a student at Bradford College. Jawad, who is 19 years old, is studying Biology, Chemistry, English Literature, Citizenship and Critical Thinking at AS level; Gillian Mann, from Hull, a retired lawyer and school governor, who is currently studying German; and Dave Thompson, 24, of Hull, studying an Advanced Apprenticeship in Business Administration, who struggled at school with dyslexia. Other panel members are from Scunthorpe, North and North Lincs, North Yorkshire, Leeds, Hebden Bridge, Barnsley and Sheffield.

During the course of the launch event each panel members had the opportunity to ask the Minister questions regarding learning within the Yorkshire & Humber region. Dave explained to the Minister that in the Humber Sub Region he had set up a Humber-Sub Regional Learner Panel to get a broader view from Apprentices undertaking the Apprenticeship route, this would give more Apprentices the opportunity to feed information into the Regional Learner Panel. One of the points that was brought up at the first Sub-Region meeting was why do employers, young people and parents have a negative view of Apprenticeships and what could be done to improve these preconceptions? The Minister & Margaret Coleman (LSC), explained that over the coming months the government where intending to spend over £1million on advertising Apprenticeships detailing what the pluses where for Young People and Employers. The Minister also reiterated that the government and the PM Gordon Brown where very focused on increasing the profile of Apprenticeships. Other questions fired at the Minister included questions on lack of Information, Advice and Guidance from key government organisations including Job Centre Plus and Connexions. The lack of funding for Adult Learners, increasing accessibility for learners in rural areas and how to get better provision for learners where all other areas that the Minister covered.

What is the Yorkshire and Humber Regional Learner Panel


The Yorkshire and Humber Regional Learner Panel is a learner voice mechanism to allow learners to voice there opinions on learning.

The Panel is made up of 16 learners from Further Education and learners involved in work-based learning from across the Yorkshire and the Humber Region. Learners will be appointed from South Yorkshire; North Yorkshire; West Yorkshire; and the Humber and East Riding.
The Panel is funded by the regional Learning and Skills Council, which plans and funds all post-16 learning in the region. The Panel is supported by NIACE, the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education.

The Panel will meet four times a year, usually in Leeds, although it can take place around the region if learners prefer. The meetings will coincide with important stages of the LSC's business cycle. Additional meetings will take place if necessary and learners will be invited to attend conferences and meetings led by other agencies, such as the Regional Development Agency, Yorkshire Forward and NIACE.

The meetings usually last all day, from 10:30 to 4:00, allowing time for travel. All travel and subsistence expenses will be paid and loss of earnings payments will be considered. There is no fee paid for being on the Panel.
The Yorkshire and the Humber Regional Learners' Panel was first established as a pilot (test phase) by the LSC in March 2007 and held its last meeting as a pilot Panel in October 2008. The new Panel will be recruited and will hold its first meeting in December 2008. Members will be expected to stay on the Panel for at least a year.Individual members of the Panel are not expected to be representatives of the place where they are learning or working, but to be keen learners who like to make a difference.

The skills required will include being able to work as a member of a team; being able to express opinions and listen to the opinions of others; the ability to take in and make sense of sometimes complicated organisational structures; and the confidence to ask awkward questions! The most important thing is that you must have an interest in learning and skills and a love of Yorkshire and the Humber.

The Yorkshire and Humber Regional Learner Panel still require members from North Yorkshire to join the existing panel. For more information please contact: John Lawton via e-mail John.lawton@niace.org.uk