Session 4 - Education, Ofsted and Employer...

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Session 4 - Education, Ofsted and Employer Engagement

Your speakers;

• Sarfraz Ahmed Leicester College

• Nick Chambers Education and Employers

• Chris Percy Economist & Researcher

• Leigh Fowkes The Open University

www.dmhassociates.org

The New Inspection

Framework 2019 –

Implications for

Careers Leaders

and Advisers

Sarfraz Ahmed

Careers Adviser - Leicester College

What you will learn:

By the end of today:

1. Look at the new developments in the Ofsted Framework

2. Explore the major updates for careers professionals

3. What are Ofsted Looking for?

4. Things to consider for careers work in schools, colleges and sixth-

forms

Where Your Strengths Meet the World’s Needs

Explore the New Ofsted Educational

Framework in relation to Careers

Guidance Work

Anyone can

deliver

Careers

Guidance

Gaining work

experience

Contact with

Employers

Raising

Aspiration

Based on

Academic

Results

What are Ofsted looking for?

Adding Value

Big Data

Not Linking

Careers with

Curriculum

Progression

to University

Apprenticeships

Links to

Gatsby and

The Careers

Strategy

An efficient curriculum

provided by schools

should extend beyond

the academic, technical

or vocational

Schools support

pupils to become

more resilient and

manage change

Links to

Employers

and the

World of

Work

Attitudes to

Learning

Behaviour

Employability

Attendance and

punctuality

Respect

Enrichment

Careers Guidance

Health and well-

being

Citizenship

Equality and

Diversity

Preparation for

next steps

Vision and Ethos

Staff Development

Staff workload and

well-being

Student Experience

Governance/oversight

Safeguarding

GOALS

Self-Motivated

Self-Assured

Aspirational

Informed

Experienced

Accountable

Resilient

Entrepreneurial

Co-operative

ACTIONS

Personalised careers guidance

Career development,

employability and enterprise

master classes

Personal development,

enterprise and enrichment

activities

Encounters with FE / HE

Encounters with employers

Experiences of the work place

IMPACT

Learners successfully

complete an external

work placement

Learners successfully

complete course

Learners have higher

aspirations and goals

Learners have the

confidence to make the

right choices about their

life and pathways.

Learners are employed

because they have the

right attitude, skills and

behaviour

A Framework for Ofsted and

Gatsby Benchmarks

Implementing the Benchmarks and get Ofsted

ready:

Specialist Careers Interventions:

• Delivered by qualified Level 6 careers advisors

• 1:1 information, advice and guidance

• Group works, including: CVs, interview skills, 21st

Century Careers, Progression to HE, UCAS

preparation, Social Media and your Online Presence,

Employability Development, Preparation for the

Workplace

• Develop links with schools / FE/HE

Learner Employability Achievement Programme (LEAP):

• Delivered by Learning Coaches

• 1:1 tutorials 4 times per year

• Weekly LEAP sessions including classroom delivery,

employer encounters and trips / visits

Qualified Careers Advisers

Link to a School / College Governor endorsed by Senior Management

Linked to Gatsby Benchmarks and Careers Strategy

Skills needed to navigate the 21st century employment market / LMI /Employers

Careers Policy Published and Transparent

Some Things To Consider

Resources

11

Email: sahmed@leicestercollege.ac.uk

www.educationandemployers.org @Edu_employers

Nick Chambers

CEO

Some of our research findings• Encounters with the world of work can improve GCSE results (2019)

• The difference between children’s career aspirations from the age of seven to 17 are marginal and often based on gender stereotypes, socio-economic backgrounds and TV and social media. The report also highlights a significant mismatch between the jobs children aspire to and projected workforce needs. (2018, 2019)

• Employer engagement has an impact on student motivation as the result of linking the curriculum to the world of work (2018)

• Employer engagement during school years increases the amount young adults earn once in full time employment. (2014, 2016, 2017)

• Employer engagement reduces the likelihood of becoming NEET (not in education, employment or training).Young people who do four or more activities during secondary school are less likely to be NEET during their 20s. (2013, 2017)

www.educationandemployers.org @Edu_employers

•Our research shows that young people in UK:

• know relatively little about jobs and the different prospective career routes often leading to an oversupply of people with skills and qualifications in certain disciplines.

• perceptions are based on narrow first-hand experiences, media and the TV and their parents.

• commonly associate one or two jobs to a sector despite the fact there exists a vast range of jobs.

• make crucial decisions about their education and training without any realistic understanding of what the jobs markets actually has to offer

• from disadvantaged social backgrounds, lacking personal family networks, were at a further disadvantage. The problems were typically exacerbated for girls.

The demand for work...

...against teenage aspirations

Young people’s aspirations have Nothing in Common with labour market demand

Redraw the Balance

In 2016, we launched a 2 film called Redraw The Balance, produced pro-bono by MullenLowe. It showed a class of 66 children who were asked to draw a picture firefighter, surgeon and a fighter pilot.

.

Exploring the career aspirations of primary school

children from around the world

How do we know we are making an impact?

Chris Percy

10th October 2019

Aim

• Exchange good and interesting practices and policies

• Identify mechanisms and methodologies that can potentially be used to inform evidence-based practices and policies

• Share ideas – build a community of interest

“Finished files are the re-

sult of years of scientif-

study combined with the

experience of many years”

Key questions

• What is the evidence base for career development services?

• Why do we need this?

• How does it work?

• How can we improve on current approaches?

Politics

International

• In countries such as Austria, Finland, Germany, Scotland, Switzerland careers education and guidance feature prominently in their education systems (OECD, 2015)

International Literature Review Drilling down: careers education

• Some evidence to suggest that impacts on attainment can be expected to be relatively modest, recognising that impacts can be expected to vary, perhaps considerably, by individual circumstance and character of intervention delivery

• Good evidence to show that earnings premiums are commonly sizeable for young adults especially when they engage with employers within teenage careers focused provision

• Good evidence that careers education also underpins a wide range of beneficial social outcomes

Quality Assurance

ELGPN Framework -ELGPN publications: http://www.elgpn.eu

New forms of partnerships

• Need to tackle the challenges of diversity and fragmentation

• Bridge between schooling and working life

• Enable educators to contribute effectively to equipping their students with employability skills

• Get more employers involved in offering experiences of the world of work

Thank you!Any questions?

Contact: Chris Percy

An invitation to continue

the dialogue…

Email:chris@cspress.co.uk

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES

How ODFs can extend the reach and impact of careers support

Leigh Fowkes

Careers & Employability Consultant | The Open University

@careers_chap

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 32

“So what impact are our ODFs having?”

1. How are ODFs useful in helping OU

students to explore and construct their

career identities?

2. How are ODFs useful for OU students

for career learning and career

development purposes?

3. How does the role and approach that

OU careers practitioners adopt in

ODFs support and impact upon Open

University students’ career learning

and development?

4. Why are OU students participating in

ODFs compared to other methods of

support available to them for career

learning and development purposes?

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 33

Research Design

A self-completed structured Jisc online questionnaire. Mainly quantitative scaling questions with additional open-ended. A five-point unipolar Likert scale was chosen.

Qualitative description of Open University student and career practitioner posts across six Careers & Employment Service hosted online discussion forums (ODFs).

Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews undertaken with a sample of OU Careers & Employability Consultants whom had moderated and participated in careers forums during the data collection phase.

Qualitative

description (QD) of

online discussion

forum posts

Self-completed

JISC Online

Student

Questionnaire

Thematic Analysis

of OU Careers

Consultant Semi-

Structured

Interviews

Q1 ✔ ✔ ✔

Q2 ✔ ✔ ✔

Q3 ✔ ✔

Q4 ✔

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 4

94%

39%

55%

9%

of students (n=31) reported

that the careers forum they

participated in had some level

of impact in helping them

understand their career

identity

of students (n=12)

declared it as

‘very helpful’ or

‘extremely helpful’

2-5 hours in the

forum. ‘very helpful’

or ‘extremely helpful’

0-1 hour in the forum.

‘very helpful’ or

‘extremely helpful’

5

Impact on career learning

The research sought to answer to what extent were ODFs useful to Open University students for career learning and career development purposes?

Students were generally positive - excluding the ‘not

helpful at all’ measure - in reporting that forum participation

was beneficial in terms of developing their self-awareness

(87%), opportunity awareness through information gathering

(90.3%) and supportive for career decision making (90.3%)

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 36

Comparison of impact on career by interaction type

Multi answer: Percentage of respondents who selected each answer option (e.g. 100% would represent that

all this question's respondents chose that option for each column)

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES

13.6

%

29.1%31.8%

79.1%

Career identity was how students

identified themselves with a specific

occupation or career through their

discourse

Cognitive Presence was the extent to

which students were able to construct

and confirm meaning through sustained

reflection and discourse

7

Community support was where forum

members offered help and assistance to

each other either through encouragement

or through access to resources

Social presence was how students

projected themselves through their

writing as ‘real people’

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 38

Thematic analysis findings

1. A learning ecology is a useful way to conceptualise careers forums.

2. The conflict between creating a safe space versus managing privacy, safeguarding and negative psychological impact.

3. The asynchronous nature of forums supports accessibility but provides challenges for guidance practice.

4. Ethical principles still underpin the activity of guidance practitioners providing support in forums.

5. Careers practitioners have clear ideas on how roles are demarcated in a forum space.

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 39

So in conclusion

There were various self reported benefits

for ODF participation impacting positively

on student career identity, career learning

and for decision making. Generally, there

was a trend for more visits+time=greater

impact.

The practitioner interviews demonstrated

wide ranging techniques and tactics in

their posting strategies adapted for ODFs,

which were also influenced by ethical

principles.

Students’ personal learning environments

(PLE) are not just limited to a web-based

environments and extend to include a

wide range of networks and contacts.

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 40

Final Say

“The breadth of ideas was interesting and showed me that I had viewed my options in a much narrower way before the forum. It made me more confident of following my own path and not just doing the usual direction that most people follow. As a mature student who already has a career it gave me ideas where I would not necessarily dump all my past experience and have to start at the bottom again. Now I have options to traverse from one career to another. Thank you OU”

CAREERS AND EMPLOYABILITY SERVICES 41

Leigh.Fowkes@open.ac.uk

Twitter: @careers_chap

You’ll find the report at:

https://luminate.prospects.ac.uk/tag/reports

Questions?

Get in touch

Session 4 - Question Time

• Sarfraz Ahmed sahmed@leicestercollege.ac.uk

• Nick Chambers nick.chambers@educationandemployers.org

• Chris Percy chris@cspres.co.uk

• Leigh Fowkes leigh.fowkes@open.ac.uk

www.dmhassociates.org

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