T-level results data for individual schools and colleges will be made public this year for the first time 鈥 but an overall attainment measure for the new qualifications has been delayed. Officials have been working on an overall results measure since before the technical courses were introduced in 2020 鈥 with to roll it out in 2023-24 once the third cohort completed. The previous government signalled that this measure would show a school or college鈥檚 鈥渁ttainment in each of the technical qualification (TQ) elements of the T-level, separately; showing average point score per entry for each TQ element, also expressed as a grade鈥. The Department for Education shared this data directly with schools and colleges as part of a data checking exercise in October 2024. The measures were supposed to be published on the Compare School and College Performance (CSCP) service in early 2025. But the department said today that 鈥渙n review, and following stakeholder engagement鈥, it has decided to 鈥減ause the publication of the planned T-level attainment measure to allow time to develop an overall result measure鈥. 鈥淭his is to give a fairer representation of T-level attainment, given the changes made to how overall grades are derived since the original plans were announced,鈥 an for 16 to 18 education said. The department will look to introduce a measure which captures overall T-level attainment 鈥渋n future years鈥. Until the new measure is available, the DfE has committed to publishing provider-level data on T-level attainment on 鈥楨xplore Education Statistics鈥 鈥渇or transparency鈥. This will be an extension to on overall T-level results that show the proportion of students receiving distinction*, distinction, merit, pass, partial achievement and unclassified grades in each element of a T-level broken down by pathway. The DfE said: 鈥淎s with data published on T-level results day in August, this will show for all T-levels taken within a provider, the count, percentage and cumulative percentage of each grade, including a breakdown by pathway. 鈥淭his data will first be published in spring 2025. It will be shared securely with providers in advance, in January 2025, using View Your Education Data (VYED). The data will not include average point scores.鈥 It is unclear whether the provider-level data will include figures showing retention or whether providers will be held to account for particularly low results. More than 350 schools, colleges and training providers currently deliver T-levels.