Qualifications on paper are one thing. What they actually change in your life is another. Let’s talk about the second part.
Here are some of the stories that have stayed with me.
The Healthcare Assistant Who’d Been Overlooked for Years
She had been working in the same role for six years. Dedicated, reliable, clearly capable of more. Every time a senior position came up, she applied – and every time, she was told the same thing: the role required a Level 2 qualification in English and Maths.
She’d left school without those grades. Life had moved quickly and going back to study had never felt realistic alongside shift work and two young children.
She completed the Functify 5-Day Maths course in a week between shifts, and the English course the following month. Six weeks after receiving her results, she was shortlisted for a senior healthcare assistant role – and offered it.
What changed? On paper: a certificate. In practice: the ability to walk into an interview and answer ‘yes’ to the qualification question without hesitation. That confidence shift was as significant as the qualification itself.
The Construction Manager Who Needed It for the Apprenticeship Levy
He managed a team of twelve people and had done for three years. His employer wanted to put him through a formal management apprenticeship – but the funding required Level 2 English as an entry qualification, and he didn’t have it.
He was, in his own words, ‘not a reader.’ Writing formal documents had always felt uncomfortable and something he avoided where possible. The idea of sitting an English exam in his forties didn’t exactly excite him.
He completed the course. He passed. The apprenticeship started the following month.
What he told me afterwards was this: ‘I thought the exam was going to remind me of everything I couldn’t do. Instead it reminded me what I could.’
The Mum Returning to Work After Eight Years
Eight years out of the workforce, primarily caring for children and an elderly parent. Sharp, organised, funny – and convinced that her skills were invisible on a CV.
She wanted to return to work in an admin or coordination role. Several job listings she was interested in specified Level 2 Maths and English as requirements. She hadn’t studied formally since school and her grades then had been mixed.
She did both qualifications back to back over a fortnight, using the bundle. She found the maths harder than expected and the English more straightforward than she’d feared. Both passed.
The first interview she attended after qualifying, she said she felt different. She had something to point to. Something recent. Not just the fact that she used to work in admin before she had kids, but that she had these qualifications and passed them last month.
What These Stories Have in Common
None of these people were lacking intelligence or capability before they had the qualification. What they were lacking was the formal credential that signals to employers that they have a baseline of academic competence.
That’s all a Level 2 qualification is, really – a signal. But in a world where that signal is increasingly required for apprenticeships, promotions, course entries, and professional roles, the absence of it has real, material consequences.
The good news – the thing I want you to take from this post – is that the gap between where you are now and where you need to be is smaller than you think, and the path is genuinely clear.
Every person I’ve seen achieve this qualification has said some version of the same thing: I wish I’d done it sooner. Not because it was easy. Because it turned out to be possible – and the other side was worth it.
Start Your Functional Skills Level 2 Course at Functify Learning
For more on career pivots, side hustles, and building something of your own around family life, visit MothersWhoWork.co.uk. And if upskilling is part of a wider return-to-work plan, Geek School also supports families navigating education at every stage.
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