Protecting the pathway beyond year 11

Preventing the year 11 drift towards NEET

By Becky Clark, Assistant Head of T&L – Curriculum | 16 Mar 2026

For many students, things do not suddenly fall apart in year 11.

 

More often, it happens gradually. Attendance begins to drop.

A placement changes. Confidence around learning slips. Students begin to feel that they are too far behind to catch up.

 

For other learners, the situation is different. Students with EBSNA, SEMH or other identified SEND may reach a point where mainstream provision, is no longer meeting their needs. Anxiety around attendance grows, learning gaps widen and, their connection to school becomes increasingly fragile.

 

By the final term of year 11, schools are often working with students whose learning journeys have already been disrupted in multiple ways. The challenge is no longer just exam preparation. It is helping those students stay connected to education at a point where what happens next really matters.

The reality for
too many young people

In September 2025, 946,000 young people aged 16-24 were classified as NEET, meaning they were not in education, employment or training. That represents 12.7% of young people in that age group.

 

For many of those young people, the turning point happens earlier.

 

The transition out of year 11 is one of the moments where students can either move forward into further education or quietly fall out of the system altogether.

 

When disruption affects learning during the final stage of GCSE study, some learners reach the end of compulsory education without a clear next step.

*Source: ONS Labour Market Statistics, September 2025

What partners
often see in year 11

By the time students reach the final term of year 11, schools and local authorities are often responding to challenges that have been building for months or even years.

 

At this stage, the goal is not simply academic improvement. It is making sure students still have a viable route into the next stage of their lives.

Why protecting momentum matters

The difference often comes down to timing.

 

When disruption continues without intervention, students fall further behind and their options narrow.

 

When support is introduced at the right moment, students can stabilise their learning and remain connected to a pathway beyond year 11.

Disruption

in year 11

Absence, placement changes, learning gaps

When momentum
is lost

Qualification

pathway breaks

Students fall further behind in learning.

Post-16

pathways narrow

Higher risk of

becoming NEET.

When momentum
is protected

Timely

intervention

Students stay connected to learning.

Post-16

progression

Pathways into further education remain open.

Acting before
momentum is lost

In the final term of year 11, support needs to be practical, flexible, and immediate.

 

Across our partner settings, three types of provision are commonly used at this stage.

Easter GCSE revision

Strengthening exam readiness

A focused two-week revision programme delivered

during the Easter break. Students revisit key GCSE topics, practise exam-style questions, and build confidence ahead of the summer exams.

Express GCSE Courses

Re-establishing a GCSE pathway

A structured one-term GCSE course running from after Easter through to the summer exams. Designed for students whose learning has been disrupted and who need a clear route back into GCSE study.

Level 1 and Level 2 Functional Skills

Creating an alternative qualification pathway

For students where GCSE is no longer the most appropriate route. Our Functional Skills courses provide a recognised pathway into further education, training or employment, with remotely invigilated exams available throughout the year.

Protecting progression

For many partners, the difference between a student progressing or becoming disengaged comes down to whether the right support is available at the right time.

 

When schools and local authorities have flexible options available, they can respond earlier, stabilise learning, and help students move forward with a realistic plan for what comes next.

 

Because at this stage, the goal is not simply helping students finish year 11.

It is making sure they leave with a credible next step ahead of them, not lost in the system.

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