Kate James is an Employment Support Officer for Kent
Supported Employment. Here she discusses her role as a job coach
to help young people with Special Educational Needs and
Disabilities (SEND), aged 16 or above, to gain and sustain
suitable paid employment.
Realising my own potential
I wear two hearing aids and have been partially deaf since birth.
I never really considered myself disabled but knew I wanted to
help support others with disabilities. I became a job coach
having been inspired by members of Kent Supported Employment; I
completed a short work experience placement and quicky realised
its where I wanted to be.
My role supports young people involved in the Supported
Internship Programme which provides career guidance coaching to
support young people with SEND to make informed choices. This
work entails understanding the positive contribution people can
make in the workplace, taking a fully inclusive approach and
offering choice and control regarding work.
When working with a young person, it’s important to match their
needs to the job role. This entails getting to know the young
person and using career-based assessments to determine what their
career goals are and what motivates and inspires them. There is
nothing better than supporting a young person, likely to become
Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET), to help them to
realise their potential.
Securing the right placement
As part of my role, I identify and approach employers to secure a
supported internship for the young person. I work with training
providers and colleges to secure smooth transition from education
into the world of work. This includes delivering disability
confident training and deaf awareness training, implementing
reasonable adjustments and sourcing natural support within the
workplace.
For example, I work with Access to
Work to ensure any aids or adaptations including interpreters
are funded, and support young people to contact interpreters to
support them both at interview and within the workplace for
meetings and training.
When securing a successful internship, the employer gets to
support a young person to flourish, supporting business
objectives, and for the young person, they gain skills in
relationship building, independence, travel confidence and
responsibility. I help achieve this by:
- Building trust and providing an open friendly space to
communicate about the young person and the opportunity available
- Arranging site visits to see the young person in the work
environment
- Providing in-work support such as interview preparation and
initial job analysis; breaking job tasks into smaller trainable
steps to help the young person learn at their own pace
- Independent travel training; teaching road safety, how to use
mobile phone travel apps and what to do in extenuating
circumstances. For example, if buses or trains do not arrive on
time.
Helping young people achieve their
goals
Through the Supported Internship Programme, training providers
and schools can refer young people direct resulting in some being
able to intern and then progress to a paid apprenticeship. This
has helped to bridge the gap that young people aged 16 and over
often fall into when they finish college. This helps avoid
situations of people reaching their mid-twenties having not had
opportunities or access to work environments, the chance to learn
vital social and cultural aspects, or gain valuable skills and
experience.
Below is some advice for anyone in a similar coaching role or
considering it as a career themselves:
- Don’t be frightened to ask people about their disabilities,
you can only help if you have the necessary information.
- Do investigate reasonable adjustments, they can make a
significant difference to a successful placement.
- Don’t be frightened to challenge the young person’s
preconceptions they may have had placed on them. For example, ‘I
can’t travel, I can’t do this’.
- Do share examples of internship success. It helps motivate!
- Don’t go for the pity card when talking to employers; discuss
the intern's interests like anyone else.
- Networking is your friend. Speak with everyone you meet to
expand your knowledge.
Monday 27th March marked the first National Supported Internship
Day. For further information about
the Supported Internship Programme, visit National
Development Team for Inclusion.