Network established to encourage diversity in apprenticeships
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The Department for Education (DfE) has today (21 February 2017)
announced that a group of employers have come together to help
promote diversity within apprenticeships. The Apprenticeship
Diversity Champions Network (ADCN) is comprised of 23 employers,
including Rolls Royce, BBC, BAE Systems and a number of small-
and medium-sized employers. The network has been established to
champion apprenticeships and diversity amongst employers and
encourage more people from...Request free trial
The Department for Education (DfE) has today (21 February 2017) announced that a group of employers have come together to help promote diversity within apprenticeships. The Apprenticeship Diversity Champions Network (ADCN) is comprised of 23 employers, including Rolls Royce, BBC, BAE Systems and a number of small- and medium-sized employers. The network has been established to champion apprenticeships and diversity amongst employers and encourage more people from underrepresented groups, including those with disabilities, women and members of the black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) communities, to consider apprenticeships. It will support the government’s commitment, as part of its ‘2020 vision’, to increase the proportion of apprenticeship starts by people from BAMEbackgrounds by 20% by 2020. Nus Ghani MP has been appointed as chair of the network, and will be responsible for setting and shaping the network’s objectives as well as working alongside the National Apprenticeship Service (NAS), who played a key role in recruiting the 23 employers to the ADCN. Skills and Apprenticeships Minister Robert Halfon said:
Chair of the Apprenticeships Diversity Championships Network, Nus Ghani MP said:
Beyond the network, the government is working to ensure social mobility for all with a range of measures including implementing recommendations from a task force, led by Paul Maynard, which has focused on issues faced by people with disabilities. The network will build on this to ensure more people with disabilities, people from BAME backgrounds and women in sectors where they are under-represented can take up apprenticeships. Notes to editors1) Nus Ghani
23 members of the network
2) Figures show that in 2015 to 2016,10.5% of those starting an apprenticeship were from a BAME background, that 52.8% of all apprenticeship starts were females and that 9.9% of the total starts were by people who declared a disability or learning difficulty (LDD). 3) Read the Maynard Review recommendations. 4) The Get In Go Far campaign is designed to inform and inspire young people to consider apprenticeships as valid and credible routes to a rewarding career. It also aims to increase interest and demand from employers in running apprenticeship programmes. For more information visit Get In Go Far. Case studyChris Achiampong, apprentice, IBMCurrently based in London, Chris works in the system sales team at IBM. Chris sits on the board of trustees for the EYFoundation - a charity who inspire and engage young people across the UK who are disadvantaged in the labour market and to support entrepreneurs, from social entrepreneurs to start-ups, to develop and grow their businesses. He is also one of the faces of the Get In Go Far campaign. Blossom Hill, apprentice, BAE SystemsBlossom is an apprentice from BAE Systems’ Military Air and Information business at Brough, Humberside. She recently won the title of BAE Systems’ UK Apprentice of the Year 2016. She was originally planning to go to university, but changed her mind after she heard about the opportunities available through apprenticeships at BAE. |
