Congress 2025: Business of the education committee
20 August 2025
51¸£Àû Congress 2025: 24 May - 11:20-12:00
Motions have been allocated to a section of the NEC's report to Congress (
51¸£Àû2173 [809kb]). Paragraph headings refer to paragraphs within this report. CBC may have added some new paragraph headings to facilitate the ordering of motions.
Section 1: Business of the education committee
Paragraph 3, Improving education together
1 Education policy as the foundation of a progressive industrial strategy - National executive committee
Congress notes Education Committee's vital policy work must underpin and strengthen our industrial strategy
Congress calls on NEC and Education Committee to:
- build on Congress 2024 motion 10
- clearly outline evidence-based policy to:
- promote the economic, social and cultural necessity of sustained investment across all post-16 education, whose institutions and employers are community anchors across the UK
- combat cuts, mass redundancies, and ideological attacks on disciplines and subject provision.
- continue annual Cradle to Grave conferences, explore options for additional webinars
- tackle 'curriculum review' through a liberatory, democratic, anti-racist, decolonised lens
- work to embed climate justice across curricula
- continue addressing global challenges, including:
- opposing the far right and its threats to education
- AI and education technologies
- defending academic freedom and professional autonomy
- building  solidarity with educators in conflict zones, including Palestine, Ukraine, and Sudan, supporting the defence and rebuilding of education systems, in partnership with global unions and campaigns.
CARRIED
2 'Arts and Minds' - defend the arts in post-16 education - Composite: London regional committee, London Metropolitan University (City)
The UK arts industry employs 2.4 million workers. Arts education is a route for marginalised people to have a voice in society and challenge discriminatory narratives. Funding cuts have lessened working-class access to the arts. GCSE entries to creative subjects have fallen by 42%. It is vital that funding for arts and culture subjects is improved as part of a new funding settlement.
Congress welcomes the launch of the 'Arts & Minds' Campaign, led by the NEU and supported by multiple unions and activists who are fighting to restore arts education as a core part of the curriculum.
We must fight for the future of arts education.  
Congress resolves: 
- to affiliate 51¸£Àû with the 'Arts & Minds' campaign
- to develop regional strategies to expand the campaign within 51¸£Àû
- to promote the campaign via the 51¸£Àû website
- to send 51¸£Àû representatives to campaign meetings to influence strategic direction. 
CARRIED
3 Foundation Year motion - University of Sheffield
Congress notes that: 
- foundation years and Access to HE courses, delivered in higher and further education settings, are necessary pathways for students traditionally excluded from HE
- fees are a poor funding mechanism, however reducing fees for particular subject areas cannot fail but to lower their perception
- this move will impact the capacity for students to access HE and impact staff recruitment and retention. Specifically reducing Category D course fees at Foundation Year level further weakens the position of Arts and Humanities and Social Sciences subjects at FE and HE level.
Congress instructs the NEC to: 
- campaign in recognition of the value of these courses
- resist course closures, outsourcing, and job losses that may be precipitated by fees cuts
- campaign for a funding model not reliant on student debt to make these courses solvent
- include these campaigns within wider campaigns such as the campaign to save our Arts and Humanities. 
CARRIED
Paragraph 4, Education funding reform
4 Reorienting HE and FE financing for a just transition - University of Exeter
Congress notes:  
- financial constraints on the HE and FE sectors, including redundancies and threats to jobs at many institutions
- the urgent need for a just transition to address the Climate and Ecological Emergency, starting with a plan for its implementation. 
Congress believes:  
- that a just transition can improve sector finances: reprioritising and lowering capital expenditure; creating more equal, inclusive, healthy and rewarding working conditions; easing workload pressures; and promoting collaborative, purposeful work
- that this requires changes in the financial models informing decision-making in HE and FE, and co-operation and support from government. 
Congress resolves: 
- to include just transition as an integral part of major bargaining and campaign initiatives
- to coordinate action to reorient HE and FE financing towards achieving a just transition
- to convene working groups to progress this. 
CARRIED
5 Trade Union education funding and supporting TU Education units - College of North East London
Congress believes: 
- trade Union education (TU Ed) is pivotal to building and maintaining the movement
- FE colleges, where vastly experienced lecturers bring high quality, accredited provision, should continue to provide TU Ed
- the steep decline in the number of TU Ed units is disgraceful; the result of repeated funding cuts compounded by unintended consequences of Adult Education Budget devolution
- TU Ed access is significantly reduced and sometimes completely unavailable for reps
- significant changes are needed to protect 51¸£Àû members' jobs. 
Congress calls on 51¸£Àû to lobby the TUC, UK Government and devolved authorities to: 
- restore TU Ed funding, increasing learner rates and re-introducing the Union Learning Fund for enough tutors to be trained and employed
- make funding available to all representatives of TUC-affiliated unions, regardless of their home postcode. 
Congress calls on 51¸£Àû to: 
- co-ordinate regular meetings of TU Ed units to share good practice and discuss issues and solutions. 
REMITTED (not taken)
Paragraph 6, Academic freedom and freedom of speech
6 Academic freedom and the managerial use of institutional technologies - University of Lincoln  
Conference notes:
- technologies can be helpful and even liberatory in educational contexts. However, institutions often implement technologies without union consultation
- increasingly, institutions use technologies to control staff and gather metrics in ways that can lack transparency, obstruct academic freedom and alter power relations towards management, and away from workers
- 51¸£Àû research shows that academic freedom is negatively affected by managerial use of organisational technology. 
Conference believes: 
- technologies should not be seen as neutral. Their use for managerial purposes is an academic freedom and industrial relations issue that the 51¸£Àû needs to better anticipate and respond to. 
Conference resolves:
- based on the research recommendations see 'Principles for Protecting Academic Freedom in the Digital University' and 'Recommendations for Unions'), to develop CPD materials to upskill 51¸£Àû branches on how to mitigate employers' use of organisational systems as technologies of power with which to undermine academic freedom. 
REMITTED (not taken)
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