Individualised Learner Record

The Individualised Learner Record (ILR) is the primary data collection about further education and work-based learning in England. It is requested from learning providers in England's further education system. The data is used widely, most notably by the government to monitor policy implementation and the performance of the sector, and by organisations that allocate FE funding.

ILR data is collected from providers that are in receipt of funding from the Education and Skills Funding Agency (ESFA). It has changed name since it began, to the PLR (Personalised Learner Record) and together, forms the Learner Records Service dataset. In October 2019, the official statistics released by the Department for Education indicated it controlled over 28.4 million named, individual records.

Specification

The ILR Specification defines what data is collected in the Individualised Learner Record for each academic year (from 1 August to 31 July).

Controversy

In January 2020, the Sunday Times reported that "Betting companies have been given access to an educational database containing names, ages and addresses of 28 million children and students in one of the biggest breaches of government data", which referred to Learner Records Service data, and said that over 12,000 organisations had access to the Learning Records Service.

gollark: ยทยทยท
gollark: I do wonder how that got added to Unicode.
gollark: You can probably partly blame bureaucracy or something for that.
gollark: So presumably it *is* maybe a net loss for quite a lot of people who are subsidizing some people's really expensive things.
gollark: That can't be right, surely. Ignoring the fact that insurance negotiates with hospitals and whatever and there's lots of weird bureaucracy, insurance pays for many very expensive things you as an individual may not need.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.