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Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The Pearson Think Tank thepearsonthinktank.com

Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

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Page 1: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Careers2020 - implications for KentKent Council: Skills and Employability Service

30th April 2013

Louis Coiffait, Head of Research

@LouisMMCoiffait

The Pearson Think Tank

thepearsonthinktank.com

Page 2: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

The Pearson Think Tank Independent think tank focused on education access and quality

Ongoing programme of research and thought-leadership e.g. The Academies Commission (with the RSA) Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Education Blue Skies, on the future of higher education Rational Numbers: Maths to 18?, on compulsory maths

Ongoing policy intelligence, analysis and comment e.g. Policy Watch

Participate in key education debates, provide a platform for ideas

All of our content and activities are free

Page 3: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Q1: Overall, how has careers provision changed where you

work?1. We’re doing a lot less than last year

2. We’re doing less than last year

3. We’re doing about the same as last year

4. We’re doing more than last year

5. We’re doing a lot more than last year

Page 4: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Q2: I’m not worried about the careers

services available to my students in the future

1. Strongly disagree

2. Disagree

3. Neutral

4. Agree

5. Strongly agree

Page 5: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

The policy context for careers – recent events £200m invested in careers work in 2011

The Education Act 2011 puts onus on schools Connexions, Aimhigher, EBPO funding slashed No careers funding transferred to schools Funding for face-to-face guidance from qualified advisers removed Duties to provide careers education and work-related learning ended National Careers Service launched in 2012 But NCS not all-ages, no support for <13 yrs, or f2f for <19 yrs Statutory guidance issued in April 2012 and updated in March 2013 From Sep 2013 duty extended to year 8 (12-13 year olds) and years 12

and 13 (16-18 year olds) Neither proposed National Curriculum nor PSHEE mention careers

Page 6: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

The policy context for careers – concerns Overall availability, consistency and quality of careers provision

Adequate funding Levels of awareness in schools about careers and recent changes Sufficient support and guidance available to schools Impartiality of careers services, particularly for vocational options Lack of data about either careers provision or outcomes Suitable monitoring and accountability mechanisms Low prevalence of school-wide and curriculum-led approaches A low priority for schools with little time devoted to careers More complex progression routes for learners International evidence of negative outcomes from similar policies Ownership falls between BIS-DfE, most funding from latter withdrawn Long-term economic, equity and social costs

Page 7: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

The Careers 2020 projectScoping out how young people can best be supported to plan for, and progress into, their futures.

Page 8: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Phase one (published + on this event website)

Mapping existing knowledge and evidence

The first phase of the project, conducted with iCeGs at the University of Derby (Tristram Hooley, Tony Watts), features an evidence-based review of careers work covering recent history, the current situation, a menu of possible options for schools, and recommendations for how careers work can be strategically integrated across everything schools do, including the curriculum.

Page 9: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Phase one (published + on this event website)

Mapping existing knowledge and evidence

•Whole-school strategic priority?•Curriculum-led?•Supported?•Monitored?

Page 10: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Phase two (currently editing final draft)

Comparing recent activity with future plans

The next phase surveyed a nationally representative sample of those involved in school based careers activities

Explore which careers activities recently took place in schools and which they are planning to deliver in the future.

How has provision changed over three time periods? Previous years Last academic year (2011/12) This academic year (2012/13

Which activities are being delivered? (building on the ‘menu’)

What age groups is careers being delivered to?

What partners are schools working with?

Page 11: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Phase two (currently writing up)

Comparing recent activity with future plans

Hoping to publish in May but a few early findings below…

Overall a very mixed picture – a careers postcode lottery?

Non-selective state school respondents relatively negative / hit hard

A few areas where school-based activity has increased…

…but in more cases there is a decline in activity this academic year

Among the hardest-hit activities were; careers-related resources

work experience (unsurprisingly given recent policy direction)

Face to face careers guidance (lack of funding, support orgs or time)

Scope to do more with younger learners and after GCSEs

Page 12: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Q3: Which ONE would improve careers

services the most at your school?

1. Make it a whole-school priority

2. Make more of governors

3. Make more of parents

4. Make more of employers

5. Make it part of the curriculum

6. Get ring-fenced funding from government

Page 13: Careers2020 - implications for Kent Kent Council: Skills and Employability Service 30 th April 2013 Louis Coiffait, Head of Research @LouisMMCoiffait The

Thank you!

Find out more about the project, add your own comments and sign up for occasional email updates

on our website at:

http://thepearsonthinktank.com/research/careers-2020/

You can also use the #Careers2020 hashtag on Twitter

…any questions?