Source · Select Committees · Culture, Media and Sport Committee

Recommendation 9

9 Not Addressed Paragraph: 61

Consistent with the ambitions of Levelling Up, we recommend that local communities and stakeholders are...

Recommendation
Consistent with the ambitions of Levelling Up, we recommend that local communities and stakeholders are given a greater role in decision-making. This could be done by building on the Community Ownership Fund, reducing the bureaucracy in funding application processes, encouraging more localised decision-making (as with the Arts Council’s area council, who could be appointed by and answerable to local government) and looking beyond just competitive bidding to incentivise collaborative, democratic, grassroots-oriented processes.
Government Response Summary
The government's response focuses on education and skills in the creative industries but does not address the recommendation about empowering local communities and stakeholders in decision-making for funding and resources.
Paragraph Reference: 61
Government Response Not Addressed
HM Government Not Addressed
The Government is committed to high-quality education for all pupils, including the arts and creative subjects. Art & Design, and Music, are in the national curriculum which is compulsory for maintained schools for 5–14 year olds. Academies and free schools are not required to teach the national curriculum, but can use it as a benchmark and must deliver a broad and balanced curriculum that includes promoting cultural development of pupils. At Key Stage 4 all pupils in maintained schools have an entitlement to study an arts subject if they wish: over half of Key Stage 4 pupils in state-funded schools have taken an arts qualification over the past four years (2018/19 to 2021/22). We recognise that the arts are an essential part of a broad and balanced education and we have provided funding to assist schools to provide enriching activities for all pupils. The Department for Education has invested over £714m of funding between financial 37 https://www.bfi.org.uk/news/action-against-bullying-harassment-racism years 2016–17 and 2021–22 in a diverse portfolio of music and other cultural education programmes to ensure all children, whatever their background, have access to a high- quality cultural education. We will continue to invest around £115m per annum in cultural education over 2022–2023 to 2024–2025 over and above schools’ core budgets. These cultural education programmes such as Heritage Schools, Saturday Clubs and the BFI’s Film Academy, support curricular and extracurricular arts education and most have a focus on disadvantaged pupils for example by region (e.g. opportunity areas) and/or income. In addition, over £30m a year is spent in the Music and Dance Scheme, providing means- tested bursaries to over 2,000 young people showing the greatest potential in these art forms. Building pupils’ ‘cultural capital’ has been part of Ofsted Inspection judgements since 2019. In the Schools White Paper, published in March 2022, the Government committed to the publication of a Cultural Education Plan in 2023, working with Arts Council England, British Film Institute and Historic England. This will include how best to support young people who wish to pursue careers in our creative, cultural, and heritage industries, including learnings from industry-led schools and colleges such as the BRIT School for Performing Arts and Technology and East London Arts & Music. In August, the Government appointed crossbench peer Baroness Bull as the Chair of the Expert Advisory Panel for the forthcoming Plan. The National Plan for Music Education (NPME) was jointly published by DfE and DCMS in June 2022, and builds on the first Plan published in 2011. The refreshed Plan sets out a vision for music education to 2030–to enable all children and young people to learn to sing, play an instrument and create music together, and have the opportunity to progress their musical interests and talents, including professionally. The NPME recognises the importance of Music Hubs in addressing the unique challenges in supporting young people’s progression in music, with committed funding to 2025. In future, Music Hubs will develop plans around three aims: to support schools to deliver high-quality music education, support young people develop their musical interests, and support all young people to engage in a range of musical opportunities in and out of school. There are no plans to expand the Music Hubs model to other art forms, although Music Hubs already play a wider role to the cultural life of their local areas, under their own auspices. The Government is investing £3.8bn in further education and skills over the Parliament to ensure people can access high-quality training and education that addresses skills gaps in all sectors - including the creative industries - and boosts productivity. This includes: • Rolling out new T Levels in Craft and Design, and Media, Broadcast and Production in 2023. • Reforms to higher technical education (level 4/5), including the introduction of Higher Technical Qualifications (HTQs). 32 Digital HTQs are available for teaching from this September. Creative and design HTQs will be first taught in 2025. • Skills Bootcamps in the creative industries, upskilling adults over 16 weeks in courses such as UI/UX design for games, web development and creative computing. The Government has also been working closely with industry to develop additional flexibilities to apprenticeships - such as the £7m Flexi-Job Pilot, and introduction of portable flexi-job apprenticeships - to improve take up of this vocational pathway by the cultural and creative sectors. There are currently five live Government-funded creative apprenticeship pilots testing these flexibilities with organisations including Amazon Prime, the National Theatre and the Royal Opera House. The joint Government and industry Creative Advisory Group is distilling the learnings from these pilots, and looking more broadly at how technical education routes can be maximis