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Title: Guidance in uncertain times: new world, new paradigm


1
Guidance in uncertain times new world, new
paradigm
  • Dr. Dermot Stokes
  • Thessaloniki
  • November 26th 2009

2
1. A changing world
  • Master narratives have broken down
  • The world is increasingly complex
  • Individualisation
  • globalisation
  • fragmentation of markets, lifestyles and
    communities
  • Change itself a central dynamic
  • shift from certainty to contingency and from
    predictability to impermanence and fluidity

3
2. Looking at the report challenges for VET
guidance
  • Ongoing innovation and adaptability in VET,
    flexible, solution-oriented approaches and
    structures for delivery and qualifications
  • Mismatches (eg between supply and demand)
    need for new relationships between educators and
    trainers and the world of work
  • Lifelong guidance - enabling citizens to have
    improved access to lifelong learning (Copenhagen
    Declaration)
  • new modes of participation for key target groups,
    new roles, new approaches and methodologies
  • adapting existing models to changing
    circumstances
  • New models developing from marginal or cutting
    edge contexts

4
Looking at the report (2)
  • Report is an excellent review and many very
    important points are made, eg
  • Consequences of early school leaving (set out
    very well)
  • co-ordination, a strategic overview, long term /
    sustainable funding are often missing and are too
    focussed on project based approaches.
  • Early school leavers are an heterogeneous group
  • Transitions are changing
  • Guidance should not be seen as one of many
    approaches to supporting transition it should
    be seen as an integral part of any approach to
    tackle this problem. It should also be seen as a
    continuum guidance is not about supporting a
    young person at a specific point in their life
    only, but is something that extends over time and
    out into the community and the workplace.

5
Looking at the report (3)
  • elements of successful reintegration
  • guidance
  • environment
  • Tailored, person-centred approach
  • Celebrating achievement
  • Flexibility in delivery
  • Multi-disciplinary teams
  • Collaboration with key partner organisations
  • Starting with life and basic skills and offering
    a mix of practical and theoretical learning
  • Facilitating access
  • Motivation
  • Supported education to work transition
  • Agreed. We may have grown complacent on the back
    of the very active labour market. Need to prepare
    young people AND the receiving places

6
Looking at the report - Conclusions
  • It is not enough to just to support young
    people - crucially the front-line support staff
    need to be appropriately selected, trained,
    co-ordinated and then supported on an on-going
    basis.
  • parental involvement plays a key role in
    motivating and supporting young people in
    education and training.
  • Another important component underpinning many
    successful case studies is a multi-agency
    approach to the delivery of career guidance and
    personal, social and academic support for young
    people.
  • NB the involvement of young people in the design
    of the policies and approaches.
  • Successful guidance policies take into
    consideration the specific situation of each
    individual, rather than adopting a blanket or
    one size fits all approach.
  • Among conclusions on preventive approaches
    Area-based approaches have the potential for
    reducing the level of early school leaving,
    although the criticism levied at them is that the
    funding tends to be spread too thinly to make a
    real impact. True but 50 of esls may not live in
    disadvantaged areas
  • Generally, I endorse the recommendations but make
    the following points

7
3. What do we mean by at-risk youth?
  • A matrix of factors is in play
  • Given eg SENs, ethnic/cultural factors, etc
  • Ecological, eg
  • families,
  • school
  • neighbourhoods
  • peers
  • social class
  • Developmental
  • Susceptibility/Resilience
  • Nothing unusual in many lives, but some have
    significant difficulties to deal with
  • Social reproduction overarches all
  • Every story is unique

8
4. Early school leaving in Ireland
  • Definitions change
  • A structural feature of education system
  • National rates
  • 1 from primary school
  • 3 no qualifications
  • 18-19 less than upper secondary
  • 25 less than 5Ds in Leaving Certificate (
    baccalaureate)
  • Females stay longer than males, outperform in
    exams
  • Educational retention strongly mirrors social
    background
  • These are robust figures, sustained over a decade
    despite heavy investment in preventive measures

9
5. Two prong response
  • In school
  • DEIS the School Support Programme (SSP)
  • NEWB the National Educational Welfare Board
  • NEPS The National Educational Psychological
    Service
  • NCSE The National Council for Special Education
    Needs
  • NBSS The National Behaviour Support Service
  • Curricula JCSP, Transition Year, LCA
  • Extra guidance support in schools with high
    numbers at risk (Guidance Enhancement Initiative)
  • Out of school
  • YOUTHREACH
  • Non-formal youth services and projects
  • Youth Information Centres, youth cafés, etc
  • Employment measures, incl training and employment
    services

10
6. Youthreach
  • Principal national response in Ireland targeting
    those who have left school early
  • Aim to provide early school leavers (16-20
    years) with the knowledge, skills and confidence
    required to participate fully in society and
    progress to further education, training and
    employment.
  • National programme, local delivery funded by
    Government, part of suite of lifelong learning
    actions
  • Delivered in 150 centres for education/training
    these are small out-of-school units, fulltime and
    part-time staff

11
7. International best practice
  • Youthreach based on extensive European experience
  • Model is universal system contexts differ
  • For example, University of Arizona metastudy
    Identifying High Quality Youth programmes
  • Physical and psychological safety
  • Appropriate Structure
  • Supportive relationships
  • Opportunities to belong
  • Positive social norms
  • Support for efficacy and meaning
  • Opportunities for skill building
  • Integration of family, centre and community
    efforts

12
8. Youthreach a synthesis of three traditions
  • incorporates best practice from education,
    training, youth work

Guidance is integrated into each phase of the
programme
13
9. Programme fundamentals
  • Learner focus - Learners are regarded as
    resilient and resourceful people, continually
    consulted
  • Methodology Education, training, youth-work
  • One centre one plan the importance of
    planning, integration QF
  • One learner one plan
  • coordination, continuity, consistency,
    collaboration
  • guidance and pathway planning key worker model
    and process
  • Progression future skills needs literacy
  • Inter-agency collaboration

14
10. Presenting difficulties
15
11. From dependence to independence
Instability, disorder, dysfunctions, detachment,
dependency
Stability, Integration, independence
The four programme phases
Foundation
Engagement and attachment
Progression
Transition
16
12. Total guidance model
  • (1) Key working all fulltime staff
  • (2) Advocacy/mentoring on training and employment
    options
  • (3) Expert counsellor (if available)
  • (4) psychologist (if available)
  • (5) Other specialist services (if available) (eg
    (youth mental health)

5
4
3
2
1
17
13. The webwheel
  • A guided self-assessment Skilled Helper model
    (Egan, 1998)
  • The core pathway planning mechanism
  • Key features of the Youthreach webwheel process
  • Mentoring
  • Profiling
  • Individual programme planning
  • Inter-agency work
  • support provision is integrated into the core
    work of centres

18
14. mentoring
  • Staff members are assigned to learners as their
    key workers - time is set aside each week or
    fortnight for mentoring sessions with learners.
  • The key worker acts as the first point of contact
    with the staff team and engages with the learner
    in an individual profiling and planning process.
  • Mentoring is a form of pastoral care - it is not
    counselling.

19
15. The webwheel - profiling
5. Strong 4. Neutral 3. Slight problem 2.
Significant problem 1. Very serious problem
20
16. Individual action plan stages
  • Stage 1 The present scenario.
  • Telling their story, describing what their life
    is like for them and rating it.
  • Stage 2 Developing new preferred scenarios the
    what.
  • Thinking about how else it might be and
    identifying goals.
  • Stage 3 Thinking about what they will do (with
    the help of the mentor) to achieve these goals
    and what will go into their plan.
  • informed by the learner's own perceptions of
    their strengths and needs
  • based on their own expressed personal,
    educational and vocational goals.
  • The plan describes the actions that will be taken
    in pursuit of these goals.

21
17. inter-agency working
  • Many of the problems the learners are outside the
    remit of the centre but significantly affect
    their participation and progression in the
    programme
  • Although there are locally-based agencies and
    services whose function it is to offer help or
    support in relation to many of these problem
    areas, learners may fail to engage with them.
  • The key worker can act as the point of contact
    between the learner and these services and can
    facilitate them to access and benefit from the
    supports available outside of the centre
  • When they leave they may need ongoing support

22
18. The MAGIC touch
  • Focus on the possible not the impossible and on
    solutions, not diagnosis
  • People own their problems, capacities and
    solutions
  • Honesty, trust and respect you are as important
    as I am
  • High expectations of the young person are
    communicated
  • Safety and challenge are balanced
  • Partnership is established between practitioner
    and young person
  • Street knowledge of frontline staff and tutors
    very valuable

23
19. Does it work?
  • For learners
  • Improved self-esteem
  • Improved participation
  • Improved attendance
  • Greater satisfaction for staff
  • Better outcomes in
  • qualifications (average 1-2 NFQ Levels) and
  • 75 progression to employment or higher level of
    VET
  • But doesnt work for all

24
20. Challenges
  • for practitioners
  • New roles, new functions
  • Blurred professional definitions and domains of
    action - formal and informal
  • Commitment and over commitment and consequent
    disillusionment and burn out
  • young people often present with distressing
    situations
  • Boundaries difficult to maintain, emotionally
    difficult
  • Need for professional support and training not
    always well met
  • Poor management/leadership
  • For providers
  • Availability of suitable practitioners (skills
    base, burn out, fatigue, IR issues, commitment,
    enthusiasm, after heroism)
  • Resistance, fear, need for training and ongoing
    support
  • Resources, time, training, support

25
21. Challenges (2)
  • For systems
  • Macroeconomic and macrosocial forces very
    influential (demand weak at present)
  • Huge effort made at preventing early school
    leaving in Ireland, little effect on numbers (not
    the only measure of success)
  • Progression into employment good, but what
    about those for whom it doesnt work? What about
    Travellers? Employer response is dubious (ie
    supply is okay, no demand) need to prepare the
    receivers too!
  • Resources structural deficiencies, short
    termism
  • Recognition of new roles, modes of working,
    contexts, etc
  • The mainstreaming challenge to change the
    mainstream, not shoehorn radical alternatives
    into the mainstream
  • Innovative approaches must be as good as
    traditional equivalents - second chance does not
    mean second class
  • Performance indicators for qualitative outcomes?

26
22. Challenges (3)
  • The trouble with risk
  • Risk and prevention - loose and woolly people
    can dodge the hard yards too easily
  • Critical issue is what happens when a risk
    becomes active.
  • Preventive intervention
  • Early warnings, rapid action, solution focus
  • New methods dont replace old systems, they
    incorporate them - one integrated system,
    different modes, managed transitions continuum
    of care and response

27
Websites
  • www.youthreach.ie
  • www.youthreach.ie/webwheel
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