Researching Reboot Plus: Examining New Approaches to Training and Skills Development for Canadian Youth

 

Carla Hotel, MA, MEd (Counselling Psychology), and Danielle Quigley, Ph.D. of Douglas College in New Westminster, B.C., are researchers of the Reboot Plus Program. Offered in partnership through the Douglas College Training Group and PEERs Employment & Education Resources with the Burnaby Board of Trade, this innovative program aims to re-engage at-risk youth in education and career development by providing them training and exposure to both post-secondary education and to the world of work.

The program is funded as a labour market research initiative by the Future Skills Centre. Their findings will inform government, labour and educational institutes on broader adoption of novel approaches to training and skills development. In discussing the project’s research plan, aims and findings so far, Carla and Danielle shared the following:

The Challenge
There is no one reason, or set of reasons, that people become disengaged from their high school. The
reasons are many and the complexity of each situation unique. There is no one fix. We need to try
several things to get students to come back and create a vision for their future.

The Proposal
The program targets students at risk of not graduating from high school in Metro Vancouver. To recruit these students, the program reaches out to high school teachers and school counsellors who had, and still have, rapport with these students. The intention of the program is to reengage youth with the idea of pursuing what they would like to do for work down the road and connect them back to their educational path. As researchers, we are evaluating whether the program is doing just that.

Students entering the program are provided training in career development, resume and job search portfolio development, and networking, presentation skills and practice. Once they have engaged in these requirements, students schedule 4 – 7 informational interviews with professionals in their chosen areas of interest. In doing so, students should realize the start-up story is a universal one, and that there
is no linear path to a career outcome. Students also spend time at Douglas College to gain insights and experience in educational life beyond the walls of a high school; this gives them a chance to envision a world beyond their experiences.

Immediate Goals
The short-term goal of Reboot Plus is that students complete the program. While they’re working through the program, the program aims to provide a positive experience that reengages them with their educational path. The project aspires to infuse hope, confidence, and self-assuredness, and our research is using measures to document change in these, and other variables, like self-efficacy, career knowledge,
and communication. Students should leave the program with aspirations for a future that calls to them. We want them to say, “I know what I want to do, and now I know how to get there.”

Medium Measurements
We are currently measuring the results as we go. One of the ways that we collect data is by surveying the students twice during this project, once at the beginning of the cycle, and again at the end. We are measuring changes in how they can complete certain tasks, their confidence and competencies, their job-search clarity, and if their abilities to communicate with others have changed over time. We are seeking a sense as to whether they are engaged in the job search process. In addition to student surveys, we are connecting with professionals who have participated in the informational interviews with students, and the team leading students through the program. Through their feedback, we can recommend modifications as required.

Long Term Aspirations
We hope to provide youth access to the possibilities that exist for them in the world they are living in. Our research leads us to pose questions that ask what the scalability of this program might look like. How might we port this program to another community, province, or region? We are a year away from concluding this research, but we are excited by the results that we are seeing. This program can apply to
many different parts of the engine, from Government organizations through to education.

Our Findings So Far
The students we have interviewed so far have a lot of hope. They have clarity. They know they can do it. The teachers and facilitators involved in the program have guided these students to see past their current barriers to glimpse their potential. Many of the employers and professionals who have given their time and expertise to the program have unexpectedly (and not requested) signed up for repeated informational interviews, finding the experience both rich and rewarding.

Every time we start with a new cohort, there is an excitement about the possibilities. This is a hopeful model. For whatever reason, students coming into the program have not been experiencing that in their previous school and / or personal experiences. The data, thus far, has been very inspirational. The community we have created is diverse, it is different, it is inclusive, and we want to ensure the project continues to have this effect.

Follow Reboot Plus on:
https://twitter.com/reboot_plus
https://www.linkedin.com/company/reboot-plus/

The Reboot Plus project is funded by the Government of Canada’s Future Skills Centre.
Le projet Reboot Plus est financé par le Centre des Compétences futures du gouvernement du Canada