Help learners self-reflect without upping your workload

Schools and colleges can help young people navigate the future without a huge amount of extra work from teachers, writes this author
11th May 2021, 5:26pm

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Help learners self-reflect without upping your workload

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archived/help-learners-self-reflect-without-upping-your-workload
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In my experience, asking a British teenager aged 13-16 what they’re good at will get you an answer anywhere between an exaggerated shrug, an “I dunno, football?” and an “absolutely nothing” accompanied by a cheeky yet embarrassed grin. After years of being told to be quiet or to stop showing off, we generally don’t know how to express pride in our skills or characteristics in the UK. And this is a problem.

In and of itself, being unable to express ourselves fully isn’t that bad (and some of it will be peer-induced embarrassment) until we get to that point of decision at 16 when we begin to have to share our skills, our abilities and our personalities on applications for college, sixth forms, apprenticeships or part-time work.


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The problem is that the majority of us haven’t been learning the script, practising the lines or shaking the jazz hands sparklingly enough to show someone in authority how we measure up to the criteria for the course or role we want to fulfil. Like the dates in history, the elements in chemistry or the quotes in Shakespeare how we understand our own skills and abilities, how we write about ourselves in applications and express ourselves face-to-face improves best with regular practice.

At 18 and beyond, the stakes get higher as work or university, self-employment or internships beckon - tasks that will be made more complicated and pressured from now on owing to the effects of Covid-19 and Brexit on the UK employment market. Young people are already being disproportionately hit by unemployment and this is set to worsen in the coming months.

So, what can schools and colleges do to help young people navigate the future and self-reflect more positively (but without a huge amount of extra work from teachers or lecturers)?

What are my skills?

By developing a structured understanding of the skills that will be useful in the future, regardless of what their role will be, and regularly measuring those skills, young people will be in a better position to explain them. One of the tools I’ve used for some time is my 7 skills assessment sheet (7SAS) which simply asks students to rank their skills against the seven skills the future demands from Tony Wagner. Including elements such as collaboration and leading with influence, adaptability and initiative and entrepreneurship, the tool simply highlights competencies and areas for improvement. If done once a term or year in PSHE or careers lessons, students’ habits and self-awareness will grow, which will have the added benefit of improving confidence.

How can I share my skills?

Applications and interviews all require us to be able to share our skills and experiences in writing and then verbally. Instead of a list of “things I’ve done” or rambling abstract paragraphs, it’s better to encourage storytelling. The STAR model enables simple story capsules to be built which can be prepared in advance and put in a student’s metaphorical back pocket for use when needed.

The “situation, task, action and result” of an event can be a great way to display multiple skills: “Three of us had been selected for a debating competition at a local college against seven other schools. After getting through the first round, my teammate had a panic attack and had to leave the stage. I took their notes and although we didn’t win the next debate we reached the semi-finals.” Concisely and in a memorable format, the student displays their debating skills, compassion, teamwork, confidence and humility.

Why not institute a “STAR of the week” on one day a week so one of the class can explain a recent event and reinforce the skills and public expression?

Where can I apply my skills?

Sadly, this can sometimes depend on where you live, your background, your upbringing and your family’s resources. How many students are being told that university is “not for the likes of us” or that “we’re not cut out for that kind of work” or are put off going into a profession or career because no one they know does that kind of work?

It may not be possible for a school or college to change every student’s future aspirations, but through planning and implementing some simple changes to aspects of careers and skills education, it can make a huge difference to many:

  • Work experience is a powerful tool for careers understanding but please don’t assume that every child can organise their own work experience - not every family has the connections required.
  • Offer all career development opportunities to all children: by restricting, say, access to information about apprenticeships and vocational skills to certain groups of students, you could be limiting chances for students to find just the thing they are suited to.
  • Offering all career options to all students is the only way to overcome the kind of stereotyping that leads engineering apprentices to comprise only 6 per cent women and 8 per cent ethnic minorities.
  • If 27.9 per cent of pupils in England went to university in 2018, then 72.1 per cent did not. How are you promoting alternative choices for your students?

Every school or college can help to level the playing field for each student and their future - their awareness of their own skills and abilities, the way they express them and also how they can apply them across a range of future opportunities - through a series of small changes.

These actions, coupled with the willingness to celebrate successes and encourage student involvement in these celebrations will make it much more likely that we’ll see the students prosper in the future, despite the challenges they’ve faced in the past 12 months.

Andrew “Bernie” Bernard is the author of The Ladder: supporting students towards successful futures and confident career choices

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