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Across the West Midlands, young changemakers are turning lived experience into policy action. - 💬 Explore their proposals and track their impact here

Sandwell College and WMCA - Accreditation Standards for youth-ready employers

Sandwell College (Nargis Boltan and Angela Tombs) have played a crucial role in supporting work towards developing the Accreditation Standards for youth-ready employers, by hosting a workshop with employers and young people on 4th November 2025, with support from YCA/ WMCA and University of Birmingham.

We now plan a second workshop in February 2025 to finalise and agree next steps on options for piloting and implementation.

The first workshop focused on identifying what makes a workplace truly youth-friendly, especially for work experience placements. Young people led the event, sharing lived experiences and shaping priorities through intergenerational dialogues with employers. The event was grounded in the principles of creative collaboration, inclusive participation, and practical co-design.

Key Priorities

Participants  were asked to discuss and prioritise from a list bringing together proposals to improve access to equitable work experience, as emerged through the INSPIRE project and the YCA Youth Summit.

Full list of proposals:

  1. Better access to opportunities

  2. Accessibility for disabled young people

  3. Employers being connected with schools

  4. Outreach in schools/ stronger community connections

  5. Working with a wide range of age groups

  6. Co- produce work experience offer with young people

  7. Offer diverse career pathways access, including to creative and culture cultural industries

  8. Soft skills development

  9. Practical hands-on placements

  10. Transport support

  11. Accessible recruitment process

  12. Support for neurodiverse young people

  13. Ensure emotional safety in the workplace

  14. Provide employability coaches/ mentors/ people that can support them and advocate for them

  15. Agree the work experience placement with the young person at the start and tailor it to their needs/ resources

We split into three groups, each with a mix of young participants and employers. We identified priorities, later refined to six core themes:

  1. Safe Environment

  2. Accessibility for Disabled and Neurodiverse Young People

  3. Cultural Awareness

  4. Transport Support

  5. Employers and schools working better together

  6. Hands-on placements

These were explored in depth, with young people proposing specific actions for each priority, in dialogue with employers.

1. Safe Environment

Young people emphasised the importance of emotional safety and respectful, inclusive workplaces. Key actions included:

  • Assigning mentors and support contacts during the placement

  • Providing feedback tools and wellbeing resources (e.g. posters, QR codes, apps)

  • Ensuring confidential disclosure mechanisms

  • Creating work experience packs with key contacts and guidance

2. Accessibility for Disabled and Neurodiverse Young People

Accessibility was seen as essential to equity. Actions included:

  • Offering tailored reasonable adjustments

  • Simplifying application and interview processes

  • Training staff on neurodiversity and inclusive recruitment

  • Co-producing programmes with young people with disabilities

  • Providing supported internships and flexible scheduling

  • Ensuring non-judgmental environments and visible role models

3. Cultural Awareness

Young people called for workplaces that genuinely embrace diversity and foster cultural understanding, without using inclusion as a superficial gesture to maintain business as usual. Actions included:

  • Promoting shared values and equality

  • Creating anonymous and one-to-one spaces for disclosure

  • Encouraging open dialogue about cultural differences

  • Reflecting cultural awareness in recruitment processes

  • Recognising and celebrating diverse backgrounds

4. Transport Support

Transport was identified as a major barrier. Actions included:

  • Reimbursing travel costs

  • Supporting safe and accessible travel options

  • Educating employers on young people’s transport needs

5. Employers working better with Schools

Strong employer-school partnerships were seen as vital for early engagement and continuity. Actions included:

  • Regular employer visits to schools and youth centres

  • Career fairs in the school/ community with real opportunities and follow-up

  • Clearer communication channels between schools and employers to support young people better as they navigate existing offers

  • Tailored support from an employability coach in the school to support applications for work experience, particularly for very competitive placements such as in the NHS

  • Co-designed outreach programmes with youth input

  • Sharing real-life career journeys and pathways with students in their school

6. Hands-On Placements

Young people want placements that reflect real work, not token tasks. Actions included:

  • Exposure to different sectors and roles

  • Pre-placement preparation and orientation, with tasks agreed with and tailored to young people’s needs

  • Clear role expectations and structured tasks

  • Opportunities to shadow professionals to gain meaningful understanding of what a particular role entails

  • Post-placement support to navigate next steps

 It would be good to add a list of organisations in appendix

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