Hartpury College will receive almost £1 million in government funding to develop key facilities and a further £1.4m to purchase specialist equipment ahead of launching three exciting new agriculture T Levels in 2024.
This latest wave of capital funding investment, announced by the Department for Education will be used to refurbish two agricultural engineering workshops at Hartpury’s Gloucestershire campus and purchase new cutting edge industry-standard equipment.
Hartpury College will launch its initial T Levels in Land-Based Engineering, Crop Production and Livestock Production in 2024-25, with the workshop refurbishment due to complete before the arrival of the first cohort of students. T Levels in Animal Management/Science and Equine subject areas will follow in future years as they become available nationally.
T Levels are technical qualifications introduced by the Department for Education as a new two-year post-GCSE option to prepare students going into skilled employment. Students enrolled on the agriculture T Level programmes will benefit from a comprehensive blend of theoretical and applied learning, spending 80% of their time engaged in academic study at Hartpury and the other 20% – at least 45 days – undertaking practical work-based training each year.
The programmes help students to hone their technical skills before entering the workplace or progressing onto further study.
Claire Whitworth, Deputy Principal of Hartpury College said: “We’re grateful for the government’s recognition of our expertise and commitment to advancing vocational training and are delighted to have been successful in securing a share of this UK-wide T Level investment funding.
Robert Halfon, Minister for Skills, Apprenticeships and Higher Education said: “This boost of over £100 million (across the sector) is our latest investment in T Levels. These are robust, high quality technical qualifications providing a unique ladder of opportunity for students to gain both classroom knowledge and on-the-job experience.”