School pupils and college students will miss out on a government
programme designed to prepare children for life after school or
higher education, councils warn today.
As the Government rolls out the second wave of Careers Hubs over
the next 12 months, which aim to provide local, targeted careers
and advice and guidance to young people, the Local
Government Association is concerned that the Hubs will
support only 1,300 schools and colleges and only reach
a fraction of young people.
This risks large swathes of young people missing out on vital
guidance which undermines their ability to make the right choices
between academic and vocational routes and will ultimately
exacerbate skills gaps in local areas.
The LGA is calling on the Government to end the patchwork of
careers activity in England by handing funding and control of
national employment and skills schemes, including careers advice,
to local areas. There are currently a number of organisations and
providers who are involved in careers provision in a community,
including the Careers and Enterprise Company, National Careers
Service, Jobcentre Plus, councils, schools and colleges.
The LGA said localised support would enable councils and combined
authorities to develop an all-age careers service would help
reduce the number of young people not into education, employment
and training – which has reached nearly 800,000 across the
country.
It would also free councils to build on the success of
discretionary local schemes they have set up, using their limited
powers and funding, to support young people with their careers.
This includes:
- A careers information brand called “What’s Your Thing’ has
been developed by Essex County Council and the Essex Employment
and Skills Board to inform residents on the wealth of careers on
offer in the key growth sectors, including STEM. The careers
booklet has been delivered to over 40,000 residents and several
hundred schools and colleges over the past 2 years.
- Norfolk County Council delivers with a range of programmes to
support young people, including NEETs and disadvantaged groups.
Their dedicated careers website HelpYouChoose offers support to
school pupils from year 8 onwards on careers, education, training
and employment, including apprenticeships.
Cllr Kevin Bentley, Chairman of the LGA’s People and Places
Board, said:
“Councils want to ensure every young person realises their full
potential.
“Two years ago the Government’s Careers Strategy pledged to
provide an improved service that supports people of all
ages. Instead, careers provision in England is becoming ever
more fragmented and complex.
“Too many young people are not receiving the high-quality,
impartial and personalised careers advice they deserve and this
is a disservice to them. This leaves too many youngsters making
unsuitable career decisions, which have a potentially devastating
impact on their future.
“Councils are best-placed to tackle this. Devolving careers
advice, post-16 and skills budgets and powers to local areas,
would allow councils, schools, colleges and employers to work
together to improve provision and match young people with
employment routes that actually exist within their local
communities.”
NOTES TO EDITORS:
- The LGA’s Work
Local proposals set out an ambitious but practical
vision for devolved and integrated employment and skills
provision. The LGA has also put together a series of Skills
Taskforce roundtables designed to bring together industry
experts and sector representatives with an interest in making
our skills and employment system as effective as
possible.
- Working with the Cities and Local Growth Unit, the LGA has
commissioned a comprehensive support offer to councils looking to
play an active role supporting Local Enterprise Partnerships and
Combined Authorities in the development of a Local Industrial
Strategy. Further details are available here.
- A Careers Hub is a group of secondary schools and colleges in
the same area which work with local partners in the business,
public, education and voluntary sectors to ensure that
careers outcomes are improved for all young people.