Why effective qualification and assessment design matters during vocational education reform
As vocational education reform accelerates, qualification and assessment design decisions are carrying more weight than ever. Education providers are being asked to adapt provision quickly while protecting quality, learner outcomes and employer confidence. In this environment, effective, flexible assessment design is central to enable providers to make robust curriculum planning decisions and maintain high‑quality delivery.
08 April 2026
Education funding reform, qualification transitions and evolving apprenticeship models are reshaping what is taught and how programmes are delivered. At City & Guilds, we support providers and colleges by creating qualifications and assessments that make curriculum planning easier. This means training providers and colleges can respond to skills reform with confidence by building provision that is resilient, relevant and ready for what comes next.
We’re always ahead of the curve, developing dynamic qualifications with the future in mind, and building in flexibility from the ground upwards. For instance, with V Levels launching in tranches from September 2027 to replace many existing applied general qualifications including BTECs, we’re primed and ready to provide relevant and effective support and guidance to education providers to make all transitions smooth and successful.
How City & Guilds approaches assessment design to support curriculum planning
Education providers are navigating multiple, overlapping reforms at once. Apprenticeship reform, changes to post-16 education, and funding changes are all landing within short timeframes, often with limited space for pause or consolidation.
Changes to the education landscape have raised practical questions for curriculum planning teams: Which programmes remain viable? How should delivery models evolve? How do you update content without destabilising learners already on the programme?
These are not abstract concerns. Poor alignment between assessment design and curriculum planning leads to timetable changes, confusion for learners, additional staff workload and employer concerns about relevance. Effective qualification and assessment design helps minimise that disruption.
At City & Guilds, qualification and assessment design starts from delivery reality, not policy theory. Our approach is grounded in co-design, and is shaped with employers and providers, not imposed on them.
We combine policy insight with practical delivery experience to ensure industry-relevant content that works in the real world, across different provider contexts and learner needs. This approach is informed by close engagement with the direction set out in the Post-16 Education and Skills White Paper, and by listening carefully to how reform lands on the ground.
We focus on four essentials:
Industry-relevant content,
shaped by employers and sector experts
Flexible delivery design,
where possible adaptable to different provider contexts
Inclusive principles embedded throughout,
ensuring content and delivery meet the needs of diverse learners and remove barriers
Clear progression pathways,
maximising successful learner outcomes
This enables providers to make confident curriculum planning decisions, even when the policy landscape is still settling.
Reducing complexity for education providers: designing for reform without constant redesign
One of the strongest messages we hear from training providers and colleges is fatigue and administration burden. Constant education reform can feel like constant rebuilding. Effective qualification and programme design avoids that cycle.
By structuring content and assessment in ways that can flex, City & Guilds qualifications support providers responding to the findings of the curriculum and assessment review without starting again from scratch. Clearer structures, manageable assessment, predictable quality assurance and alignment with post-16 funding changes all reduce burden.
Importantly, we bring providers on the journey with us at every stage, involving our customers in the product development journey from concept testing through to ensuring that the final product meets their needs, with regular check-ins along the way.
Our tutor and learner resources also support providers with curriculum planning by providing reliable, flexible and high‑quality learning content that aligns with the assessment approach. They enable curriculum teams to map learning outcomes, assessments, and teaching activities with greater consistency, and with confidence that the right content is being delivered at the right level. Because these resources are created by subject specialists, and updated in response to policy or sector changes, they help providers stay current without having to build everything from scratch.
Keeping employers at the centre of qualification and assessment design
Employer-led qualification and assessment design is critical as employers want confidence that learners completing a programme are genuinely ready for work. That confidence comes from industry-relevant content aligned to real workplace practice and clear employment outcomes.
City & Guilds works closely with employers to ensure learning outcomes translate directly into workplace relevance, supporting providers focused on employability and progression into work. We have a network of around 450 employers across 11 industries feeding into our qualifications and programmes, including technical specialists and industry bodies, to ensure that our qualifications and learning programmes are both relevant and effective. This includes 20 employer industry boards, focus groups, and qualification validators who all contribute to keep our programmes fresh and relevant to the workplace.
These employer connections are central to how we adapt to reforms, and how our offerings evolve as the industry does. Our industry links have been forged over time, and we actively seek the input of a diverse and wide range of organisations and individuals at every turn.
How effective qualification and assessment design supports learner confidence
When qualification and assessment design is clear, coherent and relevant, learners understand what they are working towards. They can see how their qualification supports progression into work or further learning. That confidence improves learner experience, engagement and persistence.
This is particularly important during qualification transitions. As explained in our guidance on understanding the new qualification transition pathways in UK post-16 education, learners need confidence that their pathway remains valid, and providers need assurance that learner outcomes and progression remain intact.
The evidence of this is clear for all to see, with 80% of learners securing employment within just three months of completing a City & Guilds qualification or apprenticeship. City & Guilds learners are also more likely to be in employment six months after than those who study other qualifications.