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Adolescent Education and Pre-Employment Interventions in Australia

Keeping Young People in Education, Employment and Training

image of Adolescent Education and Pre-Employment Interventions in Australia

About one in ten young people in Australia are neither in employment, education or training (NEET), a factor that may lower their long-term economic prospects and threaten their well-being. Individuals who did not graduate from upper secondary education, who have health limitations, or who are Indigenous are over-represented in this group. Preventative policies and interventions targeted at adolescents in their early- to mid-teens can reduce the share of young people out of employment, education and training. This report explores what is known about the potential preventative impact of educational and pre-employment interventions on later NEET status and presents a range of policies and initiatives from across the OECD that can reduce the NEET probability among key at-risk populations. The report covers interventions to prevent early school leaving and to promote student engagement and motivation; to strengthen career education, career guidance and employer engagement; and to improve the perception of the vocational education and training (VET) system and the learning of VET students. The report also provides recommendations on improving the monitoring and evaluation of youth policies in general and policies to keep young people in employment, education and training in particular.

English

Pre‑employment interventions

This chapter provides an overview of pre‑employment policies and interventions targeted at adolescent students. It discusses the potential impact of mid-teens participating in pre‑employment interventions (like career education, career counselling and guidance, and employer engagement activities) on the likelihood that they will later experience periods of being not in employment, education or training (NEET). For each of the pre‑employment policy areas, the chapter briefly outlines the availability of interventions in Australia, the existing empirical evidence on the link to NEET status, and illustrative examples from OECD countries.

English

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