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This programme is at the heart of Tomorrow’s People mission to get people back into work. It centres around one-to-one support and mentoring that our specialist advisers provide to unemployed individuals to help them back to work.
A range of tailored, confidential services is provided at no cost to the individual. Support includes action planning and basic skills assessment to explore options and training needs, CV writing advice, help with application forms, intense job search, free access to newspapers and stationery, confidence building, interview techniques and basic computer skills.
We reach the long-term unemployed by locating our specialist employment advisors directly in their communities, for example in libraries, colleges, community centres, neighbourhood housing offices, mosques and churches.
In addition, people with health issues arising from disability, long-term and mental illness, injury, drug and alcohol abuse, are specifically targeted by our employment advisers based in doctor’s surgeries, health centres, pain clinics and hospitals. For case studies of individuals supported through our GP employment adviser service click here
Young people are particularly vulnerable to unemployment in our society. Low achievers in school who emerge onto the work scene with no skills or formal qualifications face an almost impossible task to find a sustainable job.
Helping disadvantaged young people is a fundamental part of what we do. Our two main programmes are Working It Out and our Schools Employment Adviser Scheme.
This specialist programme targets excluded young people, helping them develop life-management skills and gain practical work experience through a series of community challenges.
The aim is to help these marginalised youngsters find work, education or training. Supported by a leader and co-ordinator, small groups of young adults aged 16+ undertake local projects that benefit the community and improve the environment. Projects include renovating community centres and cleaning up and deterring graffiti from public areas. The team work and planning involved in the process reinforces the other skills training they benefit from on this programme.
This programme involves the location of a Tomorrow’s People Employment Adviser in schools to work specifically with young people who are in danger of leaving education with nothing to show for it. This complements the Government’s Building Schools for the Future (BSF) programme (link to the web site here), a national initiative designed to improve the nation’s secondary educational standards.
We believe placing our mentors in BSF schools will ensure that the most vulnerable youngsters - who are almost always beyond the reach of the schools careers service - leave school with a job or training place and a plan for the future. What’s more, we also use the school environment to open up our employment support service to parents and the wider community, providing a range of employment programmes and other initiatives.
Social deprivation + lack of skills or education + drug or alcohol abuse + criminal record = no job, no hope, no future.
This is a bleak equation. Yet it is faced by anyone forced onto the margins of society through poverty, lack of skills or education, poor employment opportunities and other social disadvantages. Without effective and targeted support, many of these people will never become economically independent and re-enter society.
Tomorrow’s People is therefore developing a number of new projects to break this cycle: