To address tensions surrounding the different objectives met by
learning and skills provision in the prison system:
- Tensions between meeting the learning and skills needs
of the individual offender and the Prison Services need to occupy
prisoners in purposeful activity are a brake on better value for
money, and now need to be resolved. The primary objective
of OLASS is to increase employability and thereby help reduce
re-offending. For some individuals, in the prison system, a focus
on employability is inappropriate, and the objective of learning
and skills is to increase life skills to reduce re-offending. The
Prison Service fully shares this objective, and it also relies on
OLASS as a means with which to provide prisoners with purposeful
activity, as part of maintaining a secure and orderly custodial
environment. Tensions between the different objectives of OLASS
have prevented a re-allocation of OLASS resources across the prison
system and continue to result in confusion at the delivery level
about where provision ought to be targeted. This confusion is
compounded by the lack of clarity surrounding the role of Heads of
Learning and Skills in prisons.
Drawing on the support of the Inter-Ministerial Group on
Reducing Re-offending, all the OLASS partners need
to formally recognise and reconcile the multiple objectives of
OLASS, and clearly communicate these, and the priorities attached
to each objective, throughout the delivery chain. This will depend
on effective mechanisms for collaboration between all the partners,
and engagement between policy-makers and those responsible for
delivery at national and regional level. Resolution of this tension
will assist with the reallocation between prisons of resources for
learning and skills provision (Recommendation c),
and facilitate better decision making at the delivery level about
the allocation of offenders to provision. The OLASS
partners should also decide and clearly communicate the
objectives of Heads of Learning and Skills.
- Define a core curriculum to be in place at each prison
establishment and, in line with the LSCs proposals, bring more
consistency into the other courses that providers deliver, to allow
greater continuity when prisoners are transferred. The
Learning and Skills Council should define a
minimum core curriculum to be in place at all establishments, and
require providers to work together to bring more consistency into
the specific qualifications they deliver at prison establishments
between which prisoners are likely to transfer. The Prison
Service, at an establishment level, should give regard to
the importance of offenders completing courses, all else equal,
when making transfers.
- Consistent with the LSCs proposals, draw up and agree
with all partners plans which reallocate resources for learning and
skills provision in custody and the community, based on offender
need and likely effectiveness of intervention. The
reallocations will need to be phased over time to minimise the
risks associated with disruption to prison regimes, but
re-allocations should commence in contracts beginning in August
2009. The Learning and Skills Council will need to
consult fully the National Offender Management
Service and the Prison Service. In
parallel, learning and skills allocations should be reflected in
the standardised operational specifications for each category of
prison, to be implemented in the light of Lord Carters Review of
Prisons.
In order to maximise the available learning and skills provision
for offenders, the OLASS delivery partners should
explore the scope to draw on other funding streams in order to
benefit offenders, including the Train to Gain service, Learndirect
and ESF funding, as proposed in the LSCs Prospectus.
To meet more effectively offenders learning and skills
needs:
- Gather robust evidence to fill the knowledge gap as to
what mix of learning and skills provision is most likely to
increase offenders employability and reduce the chance of them
re-offending. The Learning and Skills Council has stated
its intention to commission independent research on the links
between learning and skills, sustainable employment and reduction
in re-offending. These plans should be taken forward as a matter of
priority, building on existing evidence and considering what will
motivate offenders to learn, involving all OLASS delivery
partners and the Department for Work and
Pensions.
- Improve screening of learning and skills needs for
offenders in the community. Probation areas should screen
all offenders under their supervision for learning and skills
needs, and prioritise referrals to learning and skills providers on
the basis of the offenders level of learning and skills need,
motivation and chances of gaining employment and reducing
re-offending.
- Facilitate access to information on offenders learning
needs, progress and achievements by providers and offender
managers. The LSC is developing an IT system that will
facilitate access to information on offenders learning by all
providers, in particular, when offenders move between prisons and
from prisons into the supervision of the Probation Service. This is
in line with a recommendation made by the Committee of Public
Accounts in 2006, on which further progress is now needed. We
recommend that the Learning and Skills Council
continues to develop its IT system and that OLASS partners work
together to ensure that offender managers (in the prison and
probation services) have appropriate access to this information, so
they can monitor referrals to learning and skills and sequence
interventions effectively. The system should allow learning and
skills providers working in PFI prisons to access and input
information, which they cannot do at present.
To improve the quality of learning and skills provision:
- Hold providers to account over their contractual
obligations to devise learning plans that set clear targets and
record progress. The Learning and Skills
Council should enforce contracts which state that
providers must document individual learning plans, including
results of assessments, qualification(s) being studied towards,
records of progress and records of regular reviews. The
Learning and Skills Council should monitor the
results of Ofsted inspections to assess improvement in this area,
and take action to apply sanctions where appropriate.
- Improve performance measures to incentivise delivery
partners to act in a way that is wholly consistent with the policy
objective for OLASS. All delivery partners should work
together to devise a shared and mutually reinforcing performance
measurement and management system that motivates
providers, the Prison Service,
and the Probation Service to facilitate offenders
attendance and encourages offenders to take up learning and skills
opportunities which have the greatest prospect of contributing
towards increased employability or reduced re-offending. The
performance measures in the Prison Service should include whether
individuals undertake their identified learning and complete it,
rather than, at present, measuring classroom occupation. In the
Probation Service, performance measures should incentivise offender
managers to screen all offenders for learning and skills needs;
refer those offenders with learning and skills needs to providers
able to meet their needs, where appropriate; and follow up
referrals and provide support and motivation to offenders engaging
with learning and skills.
- Draw up new contracts for offender learning and skills
provision in prisons, which reward providers for progress made by
offenders. The Learning and Skills
Council should design contracts, to be in place for the
next round of contracting in 2009, that include rewards for
providers that demonstrate progress made by offenders to address
their learning and skills needs, as well as teaching hours input.
The Learning and Skills Council has collected data on participation
and achievement at each prison during 2007-08, and we support the
LSCs intention to use this data to set target participation rates
and achievement levels for each provider in the 2008-09 academic
year, and minimum levels of performance from 2009 onwards.
- Implement an OLASS management information system to
monitor overall performance and effectiveness. The
OLASS partners, including Ofsted, should agree
what core set of high level indicators is needed to monitor
delivery and effectiveness and, consistent with the Learning and
Skills Councils plans, put in place systems to collect and report
relevant information. The indicators should include the extent to
which:
- offenders learning and skills needs are assessed;
- offenders learning plans are met;
- provision is of good quality;
- progress is made towards learning and skills attainment
milestones; and
- offenders enter sustained employment.