By Ravi Chandiramani
Children & Young People Now
05 November 2009
The government has snubbed former Cabinet minister Alan
Milburn's call to devolve funding for careers advice from
Connexions to schools.
But this week's long-awaited information, advice and guidance
(IAG) strategy states it will consider such action if services do
not improve.
Its document,
Quality, Choice and Aspiration: A Strategy for Young People's
Information, Advice and Guidance, states: "Local services are
now on notice to improve and if improvement is not forthcoming we
will not hesitate to take further action." Local authorities'
delivery of IAG will be reviewed formally in 18 months time, it
states.
Milburn's recommendation came in this summer's report on social
mobility, in which he slammed the quality of Connexions. However,
the IAG strategy acknowledges many services are, according to
Ofsted, delivering good advice, and says some schools' IAG
provision "is not impartial or is simply dull and ineffective". It
also states that transferring responsibility for careers advice now
would disrupt efforts to integrate youth provision during a time of
heightened turbulence, as councils prepare also to take
responsibility for 16 to 19 funding.
Reacting to the announcement, Central London Connexions chief
executive Chris Heaume said: "Connexions has never been shy of
strong performance management. It will enable us to see what we are
and aren't doing well. This will focus and galvanise people."
In a bid to boost the IAG workforce, the strategy announced the
launch of a Taskforce on the Careers Profession. This will examine
what employers, the profession and government can do to attract
well-qualified people from a range of backgrounds. There is also a
skills review under way to investigate the requirements of careers
specialists, being undertaken by the Children's Workforce
Development Council and Lifelong Learning UK. It will report in the
spring, feeding into the careers taskforce, which reports back in
the summer.
Alongside the IAG strategy, the Department for Children, Schools
and Families issued schools with statutory guidance to help meet
their duty to provide impartial careers advice.
However, one observer said the IAG strategy "sounds like a bit
of a holding operation to last until the general election".
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Views expressed in this article are those of CYPN except
where it is specifically stated that they are the views of The
Commissioning Support Programme.