enhancing school-based careers work for years 7-9 in the context of the new statutory requirements...
TRANSCRIPT
Enhancing school-based careers work for years 7-9 in the context of the new statutory requirements in careers
guidance
Dr Charlotte ChaddertonCass School of Education and Communities
University of East London
This presentation
• Action research project conducted in two schools in East London 2013-14 Funded by Greater London Authority Aim: to enhance careers work for years 7-9. • Arguments: There is much that schools can do, through internal change, to
enhance their school-based careers programme. The new arrangements have left schools with requirements
they have neither the funding, experience, expertise nor networks to fulfil.
Recommendations.
Definitions
• Careers Guidance often used as a catch-all term• Guidance is understood as support provided
normally on a one-to-one basis to support individual transitions and decision-making.
• Careers education provides the wider context for this guidance, and can include Labour Market Information, a wider understanding of training and study routes and job families (related roles in a given field), decision-making processes, career management skills
Benefits of Careers work
Benefits to young people
• Help students navigate complex array of education options
• Raises motivation and achievement
• Raising participation age
Benefits to the labour market • Where there skills
shortages• Countering aspirations
mismatch• Building career
management skills
Social equality benefits • Education and vocational
decisions remain highly gendered, classed and raced
• Potentially including employers
Current political situation
The Education Act 2011 handed over responsibility for careers work to schools
Funding mostly withdrawn from local authorities and
Connexions
Schools not provided with any extra funds to fulfil this
statutory requirement
Schools can choose whether to commission from the Local
Authority, from private providers, take CEIAG
provision in-house, or a combination of these
Market in CEIAG
This project funded by the Greater London Authority
• developed and tested ways of enhancing school-based careers work for pre-GCSE pupils • and worked towards a whole-school CEIAG strategy
10-month study in two schools in East London
• a more integrated approach to careers work in the school and curriculum, which provides the wider context for individual advice and guidance.
Careers Education
• careers work is more beneficial the earlier it begins, and provides context for GCSE choices made in Y9.
• But most secondary schools only engage with CEIAG in years 10 and 11
Years 7-9
• one of the groups most in need of CEIAG because of the potentially wide range of academic and vocational options open to them, but least likely to receive adequate support
Middle-attainers
School 1• a mixed, 11-16 school in a deprived area
with a large number of pupils eligible for free school meals.
School 2• a single-sex girls’ school with a sixth form in
an area of high deprivation with a high proportion of pupils eligible for free school meals.
Local authority support
Careers coordination
Focus on year 11 (occasionally
10)
GuidanceLittle
integration in lessons
Pupils unaware and
unsupported
Connections with careers not explicit
Findings. Stage 1: mapping provision
Findings: stage 1 contd.
Low awareness among teachers
Lack of impartiality
Data not used to inform careers
programme
Lack of employer contacts
Lack of vocational
options and info
Enhancing provision
Education focus Leadership Working
groups
CPD for teaching staff
Employer contacts
Impact: staff
• “Teachers are getting more involved in CEIAG than they would otherwise”. (Careers Coordinator School 1)
• “After the CPD session I’ve seen some change in some staff.” (Careers Coordinator, School 2).
Impact: students
• “It was really useful because people from different jobs came and from that we could decide our options and it could help us in our life” (Pathways event , year 9 pupil, School 1)
• “I liked it cos we learned different things, I’d never done engineering before at all so I learnt that you can do engineering with anything even scrap stuff, you can make it and plan design”. (STEM day, year 7 pupil, School 2)
Impact: students
• “...he said that if somebody asks you what you want to do if you don’t tell them with confidence that means you don’t really want to do it, so that made me think as well as I need to make sure that I’m 100% sure that I do want to do what I want to do and if anyone asks me I need to hold my hand up straight and say yeah this is what I wanna do even if anyone laughs at me”. (Pathways event, year 9 pupil, School 1)
• “I wasn’t too confident if I wanted to be a solicitor before this
but after the event and the assemblies we had I’m confident”. (Careers assemblies and pathways event, year 9 pupil, School 1)
Conclusions
• Schools unprepared for shift• There’s a great deal schools can do via internal
changes• Year 7-9 not too young to engage: evidence of
widening horizons and increasing confidence• Most important factor is leadership• However, schools lack careers expertise,
networks, experience which suggests shift of responsibility to schools possibly naïve
Policy recommendations• Short of recommending the re-introduction of a discrete and targeted
careers service…• More specific guidelines based on work of e.g. Association for Careers
Education and Guidance;• Careers as strategic priority;• Focus on general careers education rather than just guidance;• Less focus on business and more focus on internal changes;• Bridging services to be set up to intermediate between employers,
educational institutions and organisations offering careers activities;• Qualified careers coordinator (or even a careers coordination team/
staff advisory group) with high status in school;• CPD for teachers, including Labour Market Information;• Extra funding to be made available for these changes.