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Information for parents and carers

Taster Courses are a valuable way to inform decisions about what comes after college or sixth-form study as well as helping with career decision making.

Benefits of attending a taster course

  • Enable young people to try out university: Taking a short taster course is a safe, free and commitment-free way to see if being a student, or that particular university, might suit them.
  • Inform planning: University requires a big investment of academic effort as well as a financial investment; this is a way to ensure that they are making an informed decision.
  • Help with subject choice: Young people can use a taster course to check if a subject they already like will suit them, or try something completely new (Pharmacology, Biomedical Engineering, Veterinary Nursing, East European Languages, and so on).
  • Demonstrate what àËÅöÊÓƵ is like for a student: it’s helpful for young people to get a feel for what being a student in àËÅöÊÓƵ would be like, and maybe compare this to visiting universities elsewhere.
  • Support university applications: Young people can use the experience in a variety of other ways: to inform their thinking, include by reflecting on it in their UCAS personal statement or to discuss with parents, carers or a careers adviser.
  • Get a feel for the university premises: some taster courses allow students to visit their facilities, including sporting, social and other facilities.
  • Meet others: Young people will get the chance to meet with other students on the taster course and undergraduate students studying at the university.
A short guide for parents and carers: What are the àËÅöÊÓƵ taster courses and how they can help with career planning.

Resources for Parents and Carers

This section is designed to support anyone with young people in their care to feel more informed about careers and further or higher education in the UK. It will also suggest some resources that can be shared with young people.

The àËÅöÊÓƵ wants to make sure that everyone, regardless of their background or access to resources, can make the best and most informed decisions for them.

We understand that there is a wide variety of information around career choice and the labour market available. To help you support your child in their decision making, and to give you access to up to date information, we have created this resource with links to sites which we hope you will find useful. They include career tools, sector specific sites, and ways to gain experience.

We have all had a variety of influences on the life and work decisions we have made. Influences include our families and friends, the expectations of those around us, and our economic and social contexts, as well as our interests and abilities.

If thinking about your child’s career decisions has made you consider where you too can seek support, you have access to free, government funded careers services as an adult, as well as learning from the resources below. The is available to anyone in England for careers support, skills assessment and other resources, in Northern Ireland you can use the , in Wales you can access and in Scotland you can access .

Your child should have a programme of careers education and support at their school, in line with the , supported by a Careers Lead for the school. These resources are designed to complement the provision that your child may already have from school, to help you feel informed.

General resources

Some of these resources are especially designed for carers and parents, and others are general guides which we think you will find useful and informative.

All About School Leavers

Website which offers for those considering apprenticeships and other school leaver options.

Apprenticeships

You can access the , which includes vacancies and explanations of the different types of apprenticeship.

Barclays Life Skills

have a series of resources including videos, especially designed to help parents and carers support young people with regard to work experience.

BBC Bitesize

, which you may know from its resources to support classroom learning and revision for public exams, has a wealth of resources relating to careers, including sections on returning to learning, university, college and apprenticeships, finding and applying for jobs, and much more.

Brightside

Brightside have produced .

Career Pilot

Career Pilot has great .

They have a dedicated .

Careers Writers Association

The have created a page of parental resources which includes some suggestions as to what will be the .

Higher Education Progression Partnership (HEPP, Sheffield)

HEPP have produced a guide for making informed decisions about after school.

Internships

The website has some information about what internships, secondments and sandwich placements are, how they work, and why they're important. 

Not Going to Uni

Not Going to Uni is a portal for school leaver schemes including degree apprenticeships and other jobs, with a .

Reed

Employment agency and recruiter Reed has an .

Target

Target Careers has a and produces several guides, including one for .

Sector and subject specific resources

NB: This section is updated periodically. While we can’t ensure every career sector is represented, a good general guide can be found here on the National Careers Service website, with further links.

Biology

These resources on from the Royal Society of Biology are aimed at teachers and careers advisers but have useful information on the wide variety of careers and study options in the biological sciences.

Chemistry

The Royal Society of Chemistry has a about careers relating to chemistry.

Engineering

Tomorrow’s Engineers have a .

English, History, Philosophy

There are many web pages which describe options with Humanities degrees. Here is one for ; you can also look at and . Remember that most graduate employers are interested in the attributes, behaviours and skills of the graduate as a whole, without specifying what degree has been studied.

If your child chooses a subject that they will enjoy, they will find it far easier to do the hard work necessary to get a good degree. All universities have careers services with excellent resources and personal guidance available to help every student maximise their chances of the job or career they want after graduating.

Geography

The Royal Geographical Society has a page of careers resources for those interested in geography.

Health Careers

The NHS has an . These include Medicine, Nursing, Physiotherapy, Radiography, Occupational Therapy, Speech and Language Therapy, and many more, as well as wider healthcare careers. See also Medicine, below.

Mathematics

are designed for teachers’ use in classrooms but are freely available and include videos to understand careers in which maths can be useful.

Medicine

This website from the has up to date information on entry requirements and much more.

Modern Languages 

Prospects.ac.uk has a useful and that for .

Physics

The Institute of Physics has some : this resource is good for those who have decided they want to or if the decision is whether or not to .

STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths):

General links to and .

Teaching

is the government’s gateway for explaining all the different routes for those who are considering teaching as a career.

Resources from Employers

BAM Nuttall (engineering/ manufacturing) information about

Barclays (banking/ finance) pages about well as opportunities

BBC (media) information about a with the organisation
 
EY (accountancy/ actuarial)

GSK (science & pharmaceuticals) pages for

KPMG (digital, business & engineering)

Pfizer (science & pharmaceuticals) pages for and

PwC (accountancy/ actuarial) information for school and college leavers

Softcat (technology & IT) page about with them

Savills (construction, property & real estate) pages for

Siemens (engineering/ manufacturing) an page

Schneider Electric (energy/ utilities) information about their

UBS (banking/ finance) page for and one for

Transport for àËÅöÊÓƵ (government/ not for profit) information about a with the organisation

TUI UK (hospitality, leisure & tourism) pages for and