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Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about Higher Technical Qualifications, Student Finance, and studying online.

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All Your HTQ Questions Answered

This page covers every frequently asked question about the HTQ – what it is, how it is funded and studied, and where it leads in terms of career and degree progression.

The questions below are grouped into three sections. The first covers what HTQs are – the qualification, its structure, level, and how it compares to a traditional degree. The second covers the practical questions about studying and funding – online delivery, Student Finance England, working while studying, and the support available. The third covers career outcomes and progression – what jobs the qualification leads to, the salary premium, degree top-up options, and what the HTQ Quality Mark means.

If your question is not answered here, you can request a callback from an adviser and one of the team will respond within one working day. Academic delivery is provided by the Ofsted Good-rated South Essex College Group (SECG), the HTQ Quality Mark is awarded by Skills England, qualifications are accredited by Pearson, and online delivery is through learndirect. You can also explore the detailed sub-pages linked at the bottom of this page.

About HTQs

What Higher Technical Qualifications are, how they are structured, and how they compare to other qualifications.

An HTQ – Higher Technical Qualification – is a government-backed, employer-designed technical qualification at Level 4 or Level 5 on the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF). HTQs are approved by Skills England, the body responsible for technical education in England, and must hold the HTQ Quality Mark to use the designation. They are designed against employer-approved occupational standards, meaning the curriculum reflects what employers actually need from new hires in specific technical roles. The HTQ programme offered through learndirect, South Essex College Group (SECG), and Pearson includes the Pearson BTEC Level 4 HNC (Year 1) and the Pearson BTEC Level 5 HND (Year 2), delivered entirely online.
Three subject pathways are currently available: Leadership & Management, Digital Technologies, and Computing. Each pathway follows the same two-year structure – Pearson BTEC Level 4 HNC in Year 1, Pearson BTEC Level 5 HND in Year 2 – but with pathway-specific units, assessments, and occupational standard alignments. Leadership & Management is aligned to Chartered Management Institute (CMI) standards. Digital Technologies and Computing are aligned to BCS (Chartered Institute for IT) and IfATE technology sector standards. All three pathways are eligible for Student Finance England funding and have progression agreements with the partner universities.
Each year of the HTQ – the HNC (Year 1) and the HND (Year 2) – is designed to be completed in 9–12 months of study. The full two-year HNC + HND pathway therefore takes approximately 18–24 months. Because study is self-paced and online, the exact duration depends on the time you dedicate each week. If you choose to add the degree top-up at a partner university, Year 3 adds a further year of study, making the full route from HTQ enrolment to full honours degree approximately three years total – the same duration as a traditional degree.
The HTQ consists of two qualifications on the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF): the Pearson BTEC Level 4 HNC, which is equivalent to the first year of a bachelor's degree, and the Pearson BTEC Level 5 HND, which is equivalent to the second year. A full bachelor's degree is Level 6. The HTQ therefore covers the equivalent academic ground of Years 1 and 2 of a three-year degree. For most employer purposes, Level 5 is accepted as a strong technical qualification in its own right. If you need a full Level 6 degree, the degree top-up at a partner university adds Year 3 to complete the full qualification.
Not exactly – but it can become one. The HTQ alone (HNC + HND) sits at Level 4–5, which is equivalent to the first two years of a bachelor's degree. It is not a full Level 6 honours degree. However, the HTQ is specifically designed as the first two years of a three-year pathway: once you complete the HND, you can progress to Year 3 at one of partner universities via a guaranteed progression agreement and graduate with a full BA or BSc (Hons). Many learners choose to stop at the HND and enter employment directly – the HND is fully recognised and valued in its own right – while others complete the full three-year route to a degree.

Studying and Funding Your HTQ

How online study works, how the HTQ is funded through Student Finance England, and what support is available throughout your studies.

The HTQ is delivered entirely through the learndirect online platform. Once enrolled, you receive immediate access to your course materials – written content, video lectures, reading lists, and formative exercises. There are no fixed lecture times or campus sessions; you study when it suits you, on any device with an internet connection. Assignments are submitted electronically through the platform and marked by named South Essex College Group (SECG) tutors, who provide written feedback. The platform is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, with a dedicated learner support team available during business hours by phone, email, and live chat.
Both years of the HTQ – the HNC and the HND – are eligible for Student Finance England funding. This means you can apply for a tuition fee loan to cover course fees (approximately £6,500–£7,200 per year) and a maintenance loan to help with living costs, on exactly the same terms as a traditional university student. You apply to Student Finance England directly (gov.uk/student-finance) before your course starts. Repayments are income-contingent: you only repay once you earn above the repayment threshold (currently £25,000 per year), and repayments are deducted automatically through PAYE. The loan is written off after 40 years if not fully repaid.
The Student Finance England repayment threshold is currently £25,000 per year (2024/25 academic year). You make no repayments at all if your annual income is at or below this figure. Once your income exceeds the threshold, you repay 9% of earnings above £25,000 – so if you earn £30,000, you repay 9% of £5,000 = £450 per year (approximately £37.50 per month). If your income drops below the threshold at any point – due to career change, parental leave, or any other reason – repayments pause automatically. The outstanding loan balance, including interest, is written off after 40 years from the start of repayment, regardless of how much you have repaid.
Yes – and many learners do. Because the HTQ is fully online and self-paced, there is no timetable to work around. You study in the hours that suit you: evenings, weekends, or early mornings. The HNC and HND are each designed for 9–12 months of part-time study, with an expectation of approximately 15–20 hours of study per week. Learners who are already in employment in a relevant field often find that their work experience directly enriches their assignments and assessments, as the Pearson BTEC units are designed to be applied to real workplace contexts.
You receive support from two distinct sources throughout your studies. Academic support – including tutor feedback on assignments, content questions, and progression guidance – is provided by your named South Essex College Group (SECG) (South Essex College Group) tutor, a qualified subject specialist in your chosen pathway. Learner support – covering platform access, enrolment queries, Student Finance England questions, wellbeing, and pastoral matters – is provided by learndirect's dedicated support team, available by phone, email, and live chat. The combination of these two support streams means you have expert help at both the academic and practical level throughout your HNC and HND years.

Career Outcomes and Progression

What careers the HTQ leads to, how much graduates earn, and how the qualification supports degree progression and long-term career development.

The three HTQ pathways map to distinct career clusters. Leadership & Management leads to roles including Operations Manager, Business Manager, HR Manager, and Project Manager, with mid-career salaries of £40,000–£90,000+. The CMgr (Chartered Manager) professional credential via the Chartered Management Institute (CMI) is achievable post-HND. Digital Technologies leads to Cloud Engineer, Data Analyst, Cybersecurity Analyst, and Software Developer roles at £35,000–£75,000+. Computing leads to Software Engineer, Systems Analyst, Network Engineer, and IT Manager roles at £30,000–£70,000+. All three pathways are designed against employer-approved occupational standards verified by Skills England.
Yes. After completing the Pearson BTEC Level 5 HND, you can apply to one of partner universities – the Open University, Arden University, London Metropolitan University (LMU London), ARU London (Anglia Ruskin University), UCLan London, or the University of Bolton – and enter directly into Year 3 of a corresponding BA or BSc (Hons) degree programme. Progression agreements are already in place at each partner university: your place in Year 3 is guaranteed once you meet the stated HND grade requirement (typically Merit or above). You do not apply through UCAS or compete with other applicants.
Yes. HTQs hold the HTQ Quality Mark from Skills England and are built against employer-defined occupational standards – this means they are inherently recognised as relevant by the employers who helped design the curriculum. Pearson BTEC HNC and HND qualifications are among the most widely held vocational qualifications in the world: 3.4 million students in 115 countries currently hold Pearson BTECs. UK employers across management, technology, computing, and many other sectors accept Level 4 and Level 5 as evidence of strong technical competence. For roles requiring a full degree classification, the degree top-up pathway provides the additional Level 6 credential.
Research into HTQ and equivalent Level 4–5 technical qualification outcomes shows that graduates earn an average of £2,700–£5,100 more per year by age 30 compared to those whose highest qualification is at Level 3 or below. This premium reflects both the direct relevance of HTQ skills to employer needs and the market recognition of Pearson BTEC HNC and HND qualifications. The salary premium is on top of the lower total study cost compared to a traditional degree – meaning HTQ graduates reach their career earnings earlier, with less debt, than equivalent degree graduates starting in the same roles.
The HTQ Quality Mark is the government-endorsed quality designation awarded by Skills England to qualifications that meet the national criteria for Higher Technical Qualifications. To receive the mark, a qualification must be designed with direct employer input, mapped to specific occupational standards approved by the relevant Employer Representative Body (ERB), and assessed as genuinely meeting workforce needs in its target sector. The Quality Mark matters because it is an independent, national signal – separate from the awarding body's own quality claims – that the qualification was built to serve the labour market, not just an academic syllabus. It helps employers and learners understand which qualifications are genuinely employer-relevant at Level 4 and Level 5.

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