#NAFNext2014
What difference does it make?
Reviewing evidence on school-
employer partnerships
Dr Anthony Mann
www.educationandemployers.org/research
#NAFNext2014
“If school was like this,
I’d love it.”
Employer engagement in
education
“the process through which a
young person engages with
members of the economic
community, under the
auspices of their school, with
the aim of influencing their
educational achievement,
engagement and/or
progression out of education
into ultimate employment.”
Supplementary to
conventional teaching
(reading partners)
Complementary in offering
alternative means to reach
learning outcomes
(mentoring)
Additional in providing
learning outcomes not
routinely delivered by schools
(enterprise/employability)
www.educationandemployer.org/research
Work experience
Careers activities
Workplace visits
Business mentoring
Enterprise competitions
Curriculum enrichment
Increased achievement
Improved transitions
#NAFNext2014
www.educationandemployer.org/research
Conceptualising EE in E
Social/economic contexts
Equity and access
Economic impact
Employer engagement in education
#NAFNext2014
What difference does it make?
Why does it make a difference?
Why is it more important than ever?
How can we deliver it at scale at cost?
What difference does it make?
Career Academies: I love you!
Kemple, J. J. with Willner, C. J. (2008), Career Academies Long-Term Impacts on Labor
Market Outcomes, Educational Attainment, and Transitions to Adulthood. MDRC
Because employer engagement makes you special
Orr et al (2007) “National Academies Foundation Career Academies” in Neumark D.
Ed. Improving School-to-work transitions, 190-191
Study Wage premium Controls
Kemple (2008)
Career Academies
11%
At Age 26
Student demographic and family
characteristics, educational attainment,
including gender, ethnicity, socio-
economic status, middle school
attendance rates, geographic location
of academy, graduation cohort,
duration of employment, hours worked
per week, weeks worked per month,
hourly wage.
MacAullum –
Lansing AMP
(2002)
26%
At age 20
Duration of
employment, hourly wages
Jobs for the
Future (1999)
Boston
20%
Age 24 (?)
Unclear
Montgomery
Schools, Arizona
(1999, 2001)
CTE
Higher
At age 25
Background characteristics, post
secondary college and work activities,
months worked, income
Study Wage premium Controls
Mann and Percy
(2013)
Volume of
employer
contacts
Up to 18%
Ages 19-24
Highest level of qualification; school
type attended; age; region; gender; full-
time earnings
Percy and
Kashefpakdel
Volume of
employer career
talks
Up to 7.2%
At age 26
Academic attainment; Socio-economic
status; Early home learning
environment; Demographics (social
characteristics)
Why does it make a difference?
What does employer engagement do?
• ‘Human Capital’ – skills
– literacy and numeracy skills
– employability skills and attitudes
– work experience that supports entry to higher education
– internships
• ‘Social Capital’ - people
– Roles, relationships and practical support, e.g. Job offers
through work experience, references
– ‘hot knowledge’, trusted others
• Cultural Capital - values
– Identity, e.g. providing models of future careers, supporting
aspirations
– Qualifications, e.g. giving recognition to qualifications
% likelihood of different capitals
being referenced in statements
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Human Capital Social Capital Cultural Capital
Non-Selective
State Schools
Grammar
Schools and
Selective State
Schools
Independent
Schools
Positives (across all school types):
# Social Capital - “Authentic” Guidance
• Told us from experience. Told us straight.
• Opportunity to ask questions without prejudice.
• You got advice that seemed more genuine.
• I trusted the word of someone in the working world as opposed to
a careers advisor or teacher ‘telling’ you what to do.
• They told me that I was going to have to wait for the baby boomers
to die.
Positives (across all school types):
# Cultural Capital: Enhanced Personal Confidence
• Making you feel more confident.
• Helped me a lot by boosting my confidence.
• Helped develop my confidence.
• The excitement of being independent.
Employer engagement can modify the
distribution of human capital (technical
and employability skills), social capital
(useful networks) and cultural capital
(attitudes and identities). The impact of
employer engagement is itself shaped
by prior levels of human, social and
cultural capital.
Why is it more important than ever?
Due to globalisation, liberal labour regulation,
and especially technological change, for
young people the labour market is
increasingly:
Complex – with shifts in distribution of employment, jobs
growth in new economic areas and significant change in
working practice in traditional areas
Fractured – with churns between employment (PT, FT,
temporary), education, training, unemployment, NEET
commonplace
Demanding – higher quals, personal adaptability and
effectiveness (employability skills) at a premium in
service/knowledge economy
Schools matter more than ever because:
* evidence on scarring clear;
* costs of education and training to individual higher than ever;
* teenage part-time employment is drying up
That employer engagement in education should not just be a
concern of the Department for Education
That as engagement appears to relate as much to cultural and
social capital development as human capital development, we
should:
• Start young: employer engagement is also about breadth and realism of
aspirations which relate to identity development (pre-14 contacts are
comparatively rare)
• Do a lot: higher volume of interventions especially in run up to decision
making points (only 15% of young adults recall 3+ contacts)
• Do different things: different activities relate to different outcomes
(intensive and extensive)
• Integrate into decision making journey: from exploration to validation,
confirmation and supported progression
• Recognise disadvantage: challenge social reproduction, don’t strengthen it
How can we deliver it at scale at cost?
Make it easy, free and trustworthy for schools to
connect with employers in ways that best suit them
www.inspiringthefuture.org
Step 1: Organisations promote
Inspiring the Future as part of
volunteering scheme, or to members
and contacts
Step 2: Employees register their skills
and interests on
www.inspiringthefuture.org
Step 3: Website matches opportunities,
and education staff contact volunteers
through the site
Step 5: Employees and schools
provide feedback
Step 4: Employees volunteer at
schools
24
How it works
At end of year 2
70% of secondary schools registered
15,000 volunteers from 3,500 workplaces
35,000 invitations
500,000 young people engaging
Look out for…
Organisation for Economic Co-operation
And Development
Learning for Jobs
Thank you
Visit www.educationandemployers.org/research
to access free library and sign up for research e-
bulletins.
Anthony.Mann@educationandemployers.org
www.inspiringthefuture.org

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What Difference Does it Make-- Reviewing Evidence on School- Employer Partnerships

  • 2. What difference does it make? Reviewing evidence on school- employer partnerships Dr Anthony Mann www.educationandemployers.org/research #NAFNext2014
  • 3. “If school was like this, I’d love it.”
  • 4. Employer engagement in education “the process through which a young person engages with members of the economic community, under the auspices of their school, with the aim of influencing their educational achievement, engagement and/or progression out of education into ultimate employment.” Supplementary to conventional teaching (reading partners) Complementary in offering alternative means to reach learning outcomes (mentoring) Additional in providing learning outcomes not routinely delivered by schools (enterprise/employability)
  • 5. www.educationandemployer.org/research Work experience Careers activities Workplace visits Business mentoring Enterprise competitions Curriculum enrichment Increased achievement Improved transitions
  • 6. #NAFNext2014 www.educationandemployer.org/research Conceptualising EE in E Social/economic contexts Equity and access Economic impact
  • 7. Employer engagement in education #NAFNext2014 What difference does it make? Why does it make a difference? Why is it more important than ever? How can we deliver it at scale at cost?
  • 9. Career Academies: I love you! Kemple, J. J. with Willner, C. J. (2008), Career Academies Long-Term Impacts on Labor Market Outcomes, Educational Attainment, and Transitions to Adulthood. MDRC
  • 10. Because employer engagement makes you special Orr et al (2007) “National Academies Foundation Career Academies” in Neumark D. Ed. Improving School-to-work transitions, 190-191
  • 11. Study Wage premium Controls Kemple (2008) Career Academies 11% At Age 26 Student demographic and family characteristics, educational attainment, including gender, ethnicity, socio- economic status, middle school attendance rates, geographic location of academy, graduation cohort, duration of employment, hours worked per week, weeks worked per month, hourly wage. MacAullum – Lansing AMP (2002) 26% At age 20 Duration of employment, hourly wages Jobs for the Future (1999) Boston 20% Age 24 (?) Unclear Montgomery Schools, Arizona (1999, 2001) CTE Higher At age 25 Background characteristics, post secondary college and work activities, months worked, income
  • 12. Study Wage premium Controls Mann and Percy (2013) Volume of employer contacts Up to 18% Ages 19-24 Highest level of qualification; school type attended; age; region; gender; full- time earnings Percy and Kashefpakdel Volume of employer career talks Up to 7.2% At age 26 Academic attainment; Socio-economic status; Early home learning environment; Demographics (social characteristics)
  • 13. Why does it make a difference?
  • 14. What does employer engagement do? • ‘Human Capital’ – skills – literacy and numeracy skills – employability skills and attitudes – work experience that supports entry to higher education – internships • ‘Social Capital’ - people – Roles, relationships and practical support, e.g. Job offers through work experience, references – ‘hot knowledge’, trusted others • Cultural Capital - values – Identity, e.g. providing models of future careers, supporting aspirations – Qualifications, e.g. giving recognition to qualifications
  • 15. % likelihood of different capitals being referenced in statements 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Human Capital Social Capital Cultural Capital Non-Selective State Schools Grammar Schools and Selective State Schools Independent Schools
  • 16. Positives (across all school types): # Social Capital - “Authentic” Guidance • Told us from experience. Told us straight. • Opportunity to ask questions without prejudice. • You got advice that seemed more genuine. • I trusted the word of someone in the working world as opposed to a careers advisor or teacher ‘telling’ you what to do. • They told me that I was going to have to wait for the baby boomers to die.
  • 17. Positives (across all school types): # Cultural Capital: Enhanced Personal Confidence • Making you feel more confident. • Helped me a lot by boosting my confidence. • Helped develop my confidence. • The excitement of being independent.
  • 18. Employer engagement can modify the distribution of human capital (technical and employability skills), social capital (useful networks) and cultural capital (attitudes and identities). The impact of employer engagement is itself shaped by prior levels of human, social and cultural capital.
  • 19. Why is it more important than ever? Due to globalisation, liberal labour regulation, and especially technological change, for young people the labour market is increasingly:
  • 20. Complex – with shifts in distribution of employment, jobs growth in new economic areas and significant change in working practice in traditional areas Fractured – with churns between employment (PT, FT, temporary), education, training, unemployment, NEET commonplace Demanding – higher quals, personal adaptability and effectiveness (employability skills) at a premium in service/knowledge economy Schools matter more than ever because: * evidence on scarring clear; * costs of education and training to individual higher than ever; * teenage part-time employment is drying up
  • 21. That employer engagement in education should not just be a concern of the Department for Education That as engagement appears to relate as much to cultural and social capital development as human capital development, we should: • Start young: employer engagement is also about breadth and realism of aspirations which relate to identity development (pre-14 contacts are comparatively rare) • Do a lot: higher volume of interventions especially in run up to decision making points (only 15% of young adults recall 3+ contacts) • Do different things: different activities relate to different outcomes (intensive and extensive) • Integrate into decision making journey: from exploration to validation, confirmation and supported progression • Recognise disadvantage: challenge social reproduction, don’t strengthen it
  • 22. How can we deliver it at scale at cost?
  • 23. Make it easy, free and trustworthy for schools to connect with employers in ways that best suit them www.inspiringthefuture.org
  • 24. Step 1: Organisations promote Inspiring the Future as part of volunteering scheme, or to members and contacts Step 2: Employees register their skills and interests on www.inspiringthefuture.org Step 3: Website matches opportunities, and education staff contact volunteers through the site Step 5: Employees and schools provide feedback Step 4: Employees volunteer at schools 24 How it works
  • 25. At end of year 2 70% of secondary schools registered 15,000 volunteers from 3,500 workplaces 35,000 invitations 500,000 young people engaging
  • 26. Look out for… Organisation for Economic Co-operation And Development Learning for Jobs
  • 27. Thank you Visit www.educationandemployers.org/research to access free library and sign up for research e- bulletins. [email protected] www.inspiringthefuture.org

Editor's Notes

  • #17: Worth dwelling on, I think – strong argument for work experience in general.
  • #18: Broad structure: begin with stuff all respondents said, then zoom in on the type of comments made only by some respondents.