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Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Careers Advice in Australian Secondary Schools: Use and Usefulness
By iccdppadm @ 5:34 AM :: 975 Views :: 0 Comments :: Guidance in Schools and Training, Guidance for Young People at Risk, Assessing Effectiveness, Asia Pacific, Australia

This 2008 report was produced by the Australian Council for Educational Research for the Department for Education, Science and Training. It examined the participation of pupils in career guidance activities in upper secondary school and of the perceived usefulness of such activities to pupils. In overall terms, the individual career guidance interview was perceived as the most useful activity participated in. Lower-achieving pupils and pupils unsure whether they would complete the final secondary school year year placed more value on careers interventions. As young people participated in more career activities, they found career advice to be more useful.

Read More..
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
L'ORIENTATION SCOLAIRE : Bilan des résultats de l'Ecole 2008
By iccdppadm @ 9:22 AM :: 1085 Views :: 0 Comments :: Parents and Career Guidance, Guidance in Schools and Training, Guidance in Tertiary Education, Guidance for Young People at Risk, France

Recently published by le Haut Conseil de l'Education in France, this report highlights how the organisation of education programmes and of learning opportunities in second level schools (colleges, lyceés) in France has a negative impact on young people's choices and consequently on the provision of career guidance, and how it contributes to both social reproduction and social inequities. It sets out four priorities for future actions:

  • The transfer of responsibilities for guidance provision to the regions
  • The redefining of the role and function of guidance
  • Giving teachers a proper guidance role
  • Strengthening careers education to assist pupils to make choices.
Read More..
Monday, September 17, 2007
The Four Pillars of Career and Transition Support by Dave Turner
By iccdppadm @ 6:56 AM :: 2817 Views :: 0 Comments :: Guidance in Schools and Training, Guidance for Young People at Risk, Asia Pacific, Australia

This paper produced with the support of the Department of Education, Science and Training of Australia and the Department of Education and Training of New South Wales, introduces the concept of the four pillars of career and transition support for young people:

  • Family
  • Peers
  • Community and employers
  • Peers.

It describes the empowerment strategy involved and explains how it works in practice.

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Monday, September 17, 2007
LEITCH Review of Skills UK 2006
By iccdppadm @ 2:10 AM :: 3269 Views :: 0 Comments :: Career Development, Guidance for Young People at Risk, Guidance for Unemployed Adults, Guidance for Employed Adults, Guidance for Older Adults, Expanding Access to Guidance, Europe, United Kingdom
The Leitch review examined the existing skills base of the adult population in the UK in the context of a global economy and made recommendations on how this base should be improved to enable the UK to successfully compete in the world economy in 2020 as well as to have a prosperous society for all. Chapter 6 entitled "Embedding a Learning Culture" considers how the existing careers advice and information services support national learning strategies, and how they can be improved to provide better support for such strategies, especially demand or citizen led training provision in a Learner Account approach..
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Friday, December 29, 2006
Career goals and educational attainment
By jmcadmin @ 2:36 PM :: 3064 Views :: 0 Comments :: Public Policy, Parents and Career Guidance, Guidance in Schools and Training, Guidance for Young People at Risk, Funding Career Guidance
This report produced by Careers Scotland addresses the links between career maturity (stage of development of career decision-making) of young people in school and their educational attainments. Positive links between both were found. The results have implications on how guidance should be delivered within schools and respond to those young people who make early decisions to leave school without having clearly thought through their next steps. The report is pertinent to policy makers, school staff, career guidance delivery agencies, young people, and their parents.
Read More..
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Engaging Parents in the Career Development of Young People
By jmcadmin @ 2:41 PM :: 3056 Views :: 0 Comments :: Parents and Career Guidance, Guidance in Schools and Training, Guidance for Young People at Risk
The Western Australia Department of Education and Training (WA DET) commissioned this report that identifies and suggests initiatives that the WA Department of Education and Training can take to assist parents in their efforts to support the career development of their teenage children.
The report emphasises practical and helpful strategies to further engage parents of mainstream and “at risk’ young people, rather than presenting itself as a policy paper or summary of career development theory. International and Australian research clearly indicates that parents are important to, and can make a positive impact upon the career development of their children. Although the report briefly summarises the key messages sent to parents by education and career development experts, the focus of the report  is about how one can reach and engage parents in this endeavour.
Educational and training systems supporting parents in the career development of their children is an emerging field of work. Some policy makers (including officials of DfES (UK)) argue that recent youth policy development has overlooked the role of parents in the career development and transition support of the current (Y) generation. For this reason, the research has not only needed to analyse learning from a major Scottish initiative taken in the 1990s, but also investigate emerging initiatives, some of which have not yet been fully tested and evaluated.
The Western Australian Department of Education and Training is seen as an Australian leader in this agenda. Although it has built upon work in Canada and New Zealand, the Parents as Career Partners workshop has received strong interest from other states. DET desires to build upon its momentum and has commissioned this research in order to;
·               improve the spread and quality of the impact of the Parents as Career Partners workshops and
·               consider other measures that are complementary.
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