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‘Learning to Work’ - Advisory Group meeting Tuesday, 22 nd of May

‘Learning to Work’ - Advisory Group meeting Tuesday, 22 nd of May Katerina Rüdiger, Skills Policy Adviser, CIPD. Outline. What is this campaign about? Why do we think this is important? What value can we add? What are the key challenges? How do we tackles these?

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‘Learning to Work’ - Advisory Group meeting Tuesday, 22 nd of May

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  1. ‘Learning to Work’ - Advisory Group meeting Tuesday, 22nd of May Katerina Rüdiger, Skills Policy Adviser, CIPD

  2. Outline • What is this campaign about? • Why do we think this is important? • What value can we add? • What are the key challenges? • How do we tackles these? • How do we measure success? • Role of the advisory group • Questions / Your feedback

  3. What? Overall aim: • Shift in employer perception, engagement & investment in young people So that employers: • Help prepare young people • Make labour market / jobs more youth friendly

  4. What? Three strands: • Raise awareness /understanding of the role of HR professionals and employers • Business case for employing young people & how to articulate this to senior management and the rest of the work force • A package of options to prepare young people for work and make the labour market more youth friendly

  5. Why • Policy priorities around pathways into work • Link to CIPD centenary celebrations • Negative impact of youth unemployment • Sustainable organisational performance / tomorrow’s work force /skills issues

  6. What value can we add? • Address disconnect between young people and work • Highlight the key role of employers and HR professionals in particular, through our 135,000 strong membership • Help change hearts and minds among employers and young people to help tackle structural issues over time • Build on our solid body of work on apprenticeship, work experience, internships and mentoring of young people • Highlight emerging best practice, for example, the development of ‘in-house’ A levels and degrees

  7. Key challenges Demand: • work experience / insight into the working world • translating their skills and experiences • recruitment / access to networks • employability skills & poor qualifications Supply: • entry level jobs, progression routes • business case for investing in young people • recruitment methods / diconnect

  8. Key challenges IAG / Institutional issues: • Lack of careers advice and guidance • Weak vocational education and training systems • Lack of work-based learning • Low inter-generational mobility

  9. How to tackle? • Change perceptions and raise awareness • Package of option on how to invest and engage with young people from school to employment: • Employer involvement in education • Providing advice and guidance • Implementing work-based learning pathways • Work experience and internships placements • Access and progression routes

  10. How to tackle? • Pro-active / positive attitude towards the recruitment of young people • Skills transfer opportunities from older workers to younger workers (job sharing) • Taking part in CIPD mentoring initiative ‘Steps Ahead’

  11. Measure success / impact • Sustained and long-term action by all stakeholders • Single campaign won’t change the way labour market institutions and education systems work • But we can change perceptions and galvanise employers to act where their involvement and support is most beneficial.

  12. Measure success / impact • A shift in employer perceptions / engagement • But also some tangible outputs with more employers offering / getting involved in the varies options • A dedicated youth skills investment survey

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