The DfE has recently published some data on the workforce in the further Education sector following a survey of institutions. Further education workforce in England – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk) the data was based on the 2020/21 college year.
The majority of those institutions surveyed were either general FE colleges or sixth from colleges. The latter were transferred many years ago from the school sector, but are mainly still offering a school sixth form curriculum that is more biased towards ‘academic’ subjects than the curriculum found in general FE colleges.
Regular monitoring of teacher preparation numbers over the course of the past decade – see frequent posts on this blog – has identified physics as a subject where trainee numbers for the school sector have regularly failed to meet the target set by government through the DfE’s Teacher Supply Model and subsequent allocations to ITT providers. This has produced a teacher shortage in the subject.
In the FE sector, physics accounted for 0.3% of the teaching [sic] workforce, compared with 0.3% lecturing in chemistry and 0.6% in biology. Because of the presence of vocational subjects, staffing percentages for academic subjects would be lower in the FE sector than in the school sector. As this level, physics is ranked alongside philosophy and just above politics and classical studies in the table of staffing percentages. Even just looking at staffing of academic subjects, physics only accounts for 1.5% of staff teaching academic subjects in the FE sector.
Overall, staff with physics lecturing as their main subject, based on the data from this survey, would seem to mean that there were only around 250 lecturers across the whole of England in the FE sector in 2020/21. A significant minority are likely to be found in the 44 Sixth Form Colleges, with the remainder spread between the 187 general FE colleges. If spread out evenly, this would mean every college would have one lead specialist in physics. I assume the remainder of any teaching of physics is carried out either by part-timers or by those with qualifications that contain elements of the subject.
There does seem to be a question about the teaching of physics in the FE sector.
Cumulative percentage outcomes by centre type – grade A and above
Level 5 qualifications
| Centre type – Physics | % achieving grade in 2019 | % achieving grade in 2023 | Difference 2019 and 2023 |
| Other | 19.4% | 25.2% | 5.80% |
| Further education establishment | 18.4% | 17.2% | -1.20% |
| Independent school including city training colleges (CTCs) | 42.4% | 47.2% | 4.80% |
| Secondary comprehensive or middle school | 21.7% | 25.6% | 3.90% |
| Secondary selective school | 25.8% | 29.2% | 3.40% |
| Free schools | 27.8% | 31.2% | 3.40% |
| Sixth form college | 24.3% | 27.0% | 2.70% |
| Academies | 21.1% | 22.6% | 1.50% |
| Secondary modern school/high school | 37.4% | 37.0% | -0.40% |
FE establishments, along with secondary modern schools, both saw smaller percentages of grade A and above in 2023 than in 2019. Could this be down to staffing issues or is it a change in the mix of students enrolled or were their students learning more affected by covid?
The workforce data for the FE sector has provided a source of information that leads to many more possible questions about learning and outcomes in the FE sector.