Career Development Institute

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The Career Development Institute is the British professional association for career development.

Contents

History

It was founded in 1922. Previous to 1948, it was the Association of Juvenile Employment Officers, who worked in a Juvenile Employment Bureau. It was known as the National Association of Youth Employment Officers until April 1961, when it became the Institute of Youth Employment Officers. [1] It was the Institute of Careers Officers from the late 1960s until October 1991, becoming the Institute of Career Guidance from 22 October 1991, and the Institute of Career Guidance from 1 November 2000. [2]

In the 1960s, its staff were widely referred to as youth employment officers; there were around 1,500 of these by 1965. [3]

In the 1960s, it worked with the government Youth Employment Service. In 1962, a report it had commissioned found that apprenticeships widely varied, and some apprenticeship schemes were not really apprenticeships. [4] In the 1960s, it worked with the Association of Chief Education Officers [5] Percy Walton, the Secretary, took part in the BBC2 ten-part series Just the Job on Monday 13 January 1969, repeated on BBC1 in July 1969. [6]

In 1971 there were 2,000 careers officers in the UK, for 7,000 secondary schools. [7] In January 1972, the President, Katherine Hall, spoke at a three-day conference of the British Psychological Society, at the University of Warwick, where also Zander Wedderburn of Heriot-Watt University spoke about the effects of shift work, and Hywel Murrell of the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST) spoke; he had invented the term ergonomics in 1949, and founded the organisation which is now The Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors. [8] The Employment and Training Act 1973 made it a legal requirement for local authorities to provide careers guidance; this was revoked by the Trade Union Reform and Employment Rights Act 1993.

In November 1981 the Conservative government proposed the removal of 16 of Britain's 23 industrial training boards. [9] The YTS scheme was introduced in September 1983. [10] In May 1984 it launched the week-long Jobsearch '84, then Jobsearch '85 the next year, and in May 1986, June 1987, and April 1988, in conjunction with BBC Radio 1, which hosted phone-ins; by May 1989 it became Careers Service Week. The Technical and Vocational Education Initiative (TVEI) was launched in the late 1980s.

In the early 1990s it published Stepping into Europe, a guide to working in Europe, and Europps, for the EC. [11] [12] Youth unemployment statistics have been collated since 1992. The Conservative government privatised the Careers Service in 1994, but it was well-funded, and was a halcyon era for careers guidance in the UK, although was before the plentiful careers information later being available over the internet. When the Labour government entered, it heavily prioritised the 16-19 age range, and largely viewed capable well-qualified people, over that age range as unimportant, or 'not an urgent priority'. The Labour government formed organisations, such as the Social Exclusion Unit; the government saw people needing career guidance, often as possible victims of society. Connexions, established by the Learning and Skills Act 2000, was there to help people on the margins of society, and was less about offering professional guidance, which the previous Careers Service had done; if you required professional guidance, you were probably not on the margins of society. Connexions was, essentially, a demeaning or trivial view of careers guidance; only people with learning difficulties over the age of 19 could be helped, so it would offer nothing whatsoever to university graduates looking for work. The Connexions Card launched in June 2002, apparently for 16-19 year olds, barely had any credible effect, and was mostly taken up by more-affluent opportunist teenagers, probably on the make, instead. Connexions was not really for people entering the well-heeled professions; it was largely for people who would struggle to get five good GCSEs.

Structure

The organisation is today headquartered in the West Midlands. [13] It had 16 regional branches in the 1990s.

Function

It produced a journal called Youth Employment, in the 1960s.

Annual conference

Awards

Its annual awards started in 1997.

See also

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