Companies and classrooms collaborate to enrich curriculum and career choices
Teachers from across the county are set to benefit from a new national pilot programme that boosts collaboration with local businesses and improve young people’s careers choices.
The Careers & Enterprise Company’s (CEC) Teacher Encounters programme is engaging local businesses including companies such as Kier, Travis Perkins, the Co-op and the NHS, able to offer teachers tours of work places, industry experiences and practical activities.
The Teacher Encounters programme will bring subject teachers directly into the careers conversation. The new initiative responds to teachers’ views about training available and recognises that teachers are a key source of career inspiration for students.
They will work together with local businesses to:
- Develop a deeper understanding of local jobs - including the routes in like apprenticeships - and the skills required in the world of work.
- Pursue teachers’ interests by exploring ways of enriching the curriculum; connecting learning in lessons to how it is applied in the workplace.
- Build a shared understanding of the similarities and differences between school and work life.
The South East Midlands pilot programme is running between May and July this year and will link around 35 local teachers to local employers. The programme is supported by Pathways CTM.
The first cohort of teachers visited Kier, the UK construction, property and civil engineering company at their site at Luton and Dunstable Hospital on 11 May.
Isobel Taylor, Strategic Hub Lead for the South East Midlands Careers Hub, said: “Getting the right skills and talent is a priority for every business. Participation in the Teachers Encounters programme is another brilliant way for firms of all sizes and sectors to step up and take action to help ensure tomorrow’s workforce are informed and inspired about careers in business.”
The Teacher Encounters programme builds on policy proposals for careers awareness training for all teachers in the Government’s Skills for Jobs (January 2021) and Schools (March 2022) White Papers. Proposals echoed by Lord Blunkett’s recent Learning and Skills Report (October 2022).
- Research by The Sutton Trust shows that nationally, nearly nine in ten teachers (88%) feel their training doesn’t currently prepare them to deliver careers support to students.
- A report by PLMR shows while 70 per cent of teachers agree apprenticeships provide excellent future opportunities, only 26 per cent feel confident advising students about how to find an apprenticeship. In contrast, when it comes to university applications, 90 per cent feel confident giving advice.
- Evidence from two early pilots in Oxfordshire and Berkshire show support among teachers for Teacher Encounters. They say they help them improve their understanding of the range of jobs and routes into the workplace of today. They also help them bring that insight into how they teach their subjects, linking classroom learning to workplace skills.
The South East Midlands Careers Hub is seeking more volunteers from local businesses to ‘Give an Hour’ and support careers activities across the region’s schools and colleges. More information about how businesses can get involved in shaping careers learning in schools, and more about Teachers Encounters, can be found on the Careers Hub section of our site or contact: careershub@semlep.com