@article{discovery10187838,
            year = {2022},
          number = {8},
       publisher = {ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD},
          volume = {35},
            note = {{\copyright} 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor \& Francis Group. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).},
           pages = {782--797},
           title = {'We are all in the same storm but not in the same boat': the COVID pandemic and the Further Education Sector},
         journal = {Journal of Education and Work},
        keywords = {- COVID pandemic, further education, rapid review research, COVID recovery ecosystems},
        abstract = {The quotation in the title from a college leader is a stark reflection of the experience of the Further Education (FE) Sector during the COVID pandemic (2020-21). Traditionally regarded as a poor relation of the English education system, evidence from Sector sources suggest that the five COVID harms identified through a scoping review of the latest research closely mirror the main social and educational features of English general FE colleges. The pandemic has led to longer-term harms on vocational learning, with major disruptions to college-based courses and to apprenticeships, a stagnation situation captured in the metaphor 'educational long-COVID'. The analysis conceptualises the impact of the pandemic on FE provision and learners as leading to a 'COVID learning and skills equilibrium'; whereas effective mitigations are conceptualised through the idea of 'COVID recovery ecosystems'. Rapid review evidence suggests that the most effective way of addressing system-wide disruption is the development of integrated, strategic actions at local and regional levels to address vocational learning losses, facilitate greater entry-to-employment and to create more job opportunities for young people. Without these longer-term measures it is likely that the negative effects of the pandemic on the FE Sector could become further entrenched.},
          author = {Spours, Ken and Grainger, Paul and Vigurs, Carol},
             url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13639080.2022.2149715}
}