What a good post-16 pathway actually looks like

When we talk about ‘post-16 pathways’, we often jump straight to options — college, apprenticeships, supported internships.

But a good pathway isn’t defined by the setting. It’s defined by whether it genuinely prepares a young person for adulthood, independence, and meaningful participation in society.

For young people with SEND, this distinction matters even more.

So what does a good post-16 pathway actually look like?

It starts early (and is person-centred)

A strong pathway doesn’t begin in Year 11. It starts in Year 9 transition planning and evolves over time.

The most effective pathways:

  • Are built around strengths, interests, and aspirations
  • Include the young person’s voice at every stage
  • Involve families, professionals, and providers working together

This aligns with guidance that transitions should involve early planning and collaboration between schools, families and post-16 providers.

If planning starts late, pathways become reactive instead of purposeful.

It has a clear destination (not just a placement)

A common issue: young people are placed into a course without a clear long-term goal.

A good pathway answers:

Where is this leading?

What will this young person be able to do at 18, 21, or 25?

Possible destinations include:

  • Paid employment
  • Supported employment
  • Further or higher education
  • Independent or supported living

Government reforms emphasise that post-16 pathways should provide a “clear line of sight” to further study or employment  .

If there’s no destination, it’s not a pathway — it’s just provision.

It matches the right type of learning

Not all learners thrive in the same environment — and post-16 is where this really matters.

A good pathway considers:

  • Academic vs vocational vs experiential learning styles
  • Assessment preferences (exams vs coursework vs practical learning)
  • Sensory and environmental needs

Options might include:

  • A-levels (academic)
  • T-levels or vocational courses (technical)
  • Apprenticeships (work-based)
  • Supported internships (employment-focused)

Different pathways suit different young people, and choosing based on learning style and engagement is critical.

The “best” pathway is the one the young person can succeed in — not the most traditional one.

It builds real-life skills (not just qualifications)

Qualifications matter — but they’re not enough on their own.

A strong post-16 pathway develops:

  • Communication and social skills
  • Travel training and independence
  • Self-advocacy
  • Workplace behaviours
  • Problem-solving and resilience

The SEND Code of Practice emphasises that post-16 education should support progression into adult life, not just academic achievement.

If a young person leaves with certificates but no independence, the pathway hasn’t done its job.

It includes meaningful work experience

One of the biggest predictors of successful outcomes is real-world exposure.

Effective pathways include:

  • Structured work experience
  • Employer engagement
  • Supported internships or traineeships

Apprenticeships and work-based routes are particularly valuable because they combine learning with real employment environments.

Work experience shouldn’t be an add-on — it should be central.

It is flexible and reviewable

Young people change — and so should their pathway.

A good pathway:

  • Allows movement between routes
  • Includes regular reviews
  • Responds to progress, setbacks, and new interests

Research shows that post-16 decisions are influenced by factors like confidence, expectations, and social context.

A rigid pathway can limit potential. A flexible one unlocks it.

It is aspirational and realistic

Low expectations remain one of the biggest barriers for young people with SEND.

A strong pathway:

  • Stretches the young person
  • Builds independence step by step
  • Avoids “parking” in low-impact provision
  • Promotes progression

At the same time, it must be:

  • Achievable
  • Supported
  • Tailored

The goal is not just participation — it’s progression.

So… What does “good” really look like?

A good post-16 pathway is:

✔ Planned early
✔ Built around the young person
✔ Focused on a clear outcome
✔ Rich in real-life experiences
✔ Flexible and ambitious

Most importantly, it prepares a young person for a life beyond education.

Final thought

Post-16 isn’t just the next step.

It’s the bridge between childhood and adulthood.

And when we get it right, we don’t just change outcomes — we change lives.

References

Department for Education (2025). Post-16 pathways: outcomes analysis  

Department for Education (2026). Post-16 level 3 and below pathways consultation outcome  

Staffordshire County Council. Post-16 Toolkit: Transition and Preparing for Adulthood  

Nuffield Foundation (2024). Post-16 pathways and social influences  RSC Education (2025). Guide to post-16 pathways  

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