North East Connected

Survey finds Young People not Work-ready

Screen Shot 2015-11-11 at 16.14.07Two-thirds of businesses in the North East (66%) believe that secondary schools are not effective at preparing young people for work, according to a major new UK-wide survey of 3,552 business and education leaders carried out by the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) and the North East Chamber of Commerce (NECC).

Business leaders surveyed think that secondary schools could do more to help students get on the career ladder – with threekey actions needed to bridge the gap between the worlds of education and work:

Embed key skills for work in the curriculum. The entry level skills that firms value most are: communication (93%), literacy (78%), numeracy (68%), teamwork (59%), IT (58%), problem solving (34%), planning and organisation (29%).

Support pupils to achieve job success

Firms think schools should teach pupils:

Reform careers guidance to prioritise contact with businesspeople and the workplace

With youth unemployment rates still stubbornly three times the overall unemployment rate, the BCC and NECC are calling for action not just from ministers and schools – but also from businesses, more of whom need to work with local schools to plug skills gaps and help young people make a successful transition from education to work.

Paul Carbert, NECC Policy Advisor said of the results: “Some of these results are disappointing; however the North East is making progress in this area. All of the actions called for by business leaders to improve careers advice are included in the eight benchmarks identified by the Gatsby Foundation’s Good Career Guidance report, so as a region we are aware of what needs to be done, we just need to do more of it.

An example can be found within North East construction company Esh Group who recently won the BITC National ‘The Schools Partnership Award 2015’ for its Building My Skills Programme.

The scheme brought together businesses and schools across the north of England to provide a structured, free career advice programme to almost 7,000 young people providing invaluable understanding about the world of work directly from employers with students benefitting from mock interviews, work experience and apprenticeship opportunities.

“This research shows that there is much work to be done, but we are starting to see progress being made,” said Mr Carbet.

“We are currently supporting the North East LEP’s Career Benchmarks Pilot which will test the implementation of the benchmarks in 13 schools and colleges in the NELEP area and look forward to seeing the results this will achieve.

“Employers are our best asset. However, without engaging with higher education institutions it is possible that a vicious cycle will prevent the skills gap from closing. Employers need to work together with school, colleges and universities and reach out to young people to show them their companies exist.

“Businesses must continue to offer work experience, give advice on writing CVs and invite students to take part in practice interviews. By volunteering their time to share their own career paths as a guest speaker or providing one on one mentoring, an employee can make a huge difference to a student’s future career.”

Further findings from the survey:

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