College to become centre of technical excellence

Tony Fisherand
Nicola Haseler,in Milton Keynes
News imageSam Read/BBC The front of Milton Keynes College, which has a small tree and bushes outside as well as a pedestrianised area. The wooden-clad building has small round windows of different colours.Sam Read/BBC
Milton Keynes College is one of 19 across the country getting a share of the latest funding

A college has been given a share of £175m to transform it into a centre of technical excellence.

Milton Keynes College is among 19 across the country to benefit from the government funding, which aims to deliver training in sectors deemed important for the future of the UK.

It will become a technical excellence college for digital, chosen because it sits in the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor.

Speaking on a visit to the city, Baroness Jacqui Smith, Minister for Skills, said the money would help provide new opportunities to work with employers, develop staff and introduce new courses.

She added that employers needed people who understood artificial intelligence (AI) because "we need young people to be able to succeed if the country is going to succeed".

News imageAnt Saddington/BBC A woman wearing glasses and a red jacket and dark blue top and trousers looking down at a four legged robot being operated by a student in the background. Ant Saddington/BBC
Minister for Skills Jacqui Smith watching a robot being operated by student Christian Procter

Sally Alexander, Chief Executive of Milton Keynes College, said its transformation into a technical excellence college was "really exciting".

"We will be working with an alliance of seven further education colleges to help develop the courses that are needed," she added.

"We will be able to purchase new resources and build more space for students to work in."

Alexander said plans to build a Universal Studios theme park near Bedford could mean plenty of job opportunities for students with the right skills.

"We will work very closely with Universal Studios to see what sort of curriculum they need, so that students can get jobs in areas such as data analysis and game design.

"We can take an existing qualification or develop a new one so that we meet the needs of employers," Alexander added.

Smith said that students would leave with skills that would be "snapped up by Universal Studios".

News imageAnt Saddington/BBC A young woman with glasses and blonde hair who is looking at the camera. She is sitting down and is wearing a white shirt.Ant Saddington/BBC
Digital software development student Millie Tysom said she wanted to do something new

Millie Tysom is studying for a Digital Software Development T-Level, a two-year course equivalent to three A-levels, focusing on programming, design and software production.

She said it would "mean so much to be able to have this [money] available to more people".

The Department for Education said the new technical excellence colleges would provide training for 65,000 young people.

It said it was part of wider plans to plug a 1.7m worker shortfall in Britain's priority industries by 2030.

The first wave of technical excellence colleges, announced in August 2025, specialised in construction.

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