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Career Educators’ vital role in delivering stability to a bubble of disrupted middle school students

In January 2020 I was on holiday with my family at a BnB in Dunsborough. We were sitting on the deck overlooking the bush when we first heard about a virus in China that would go on to cause chaos in our lives. 

Dunsborough Holiday

My oldest grandkids were only 9 at the time and they were off in the bush building cubby houses. Their lives were about to be thrown into turmoil.

Middle School

There is now a bubble of middle school students who may not remember life before COVID. They will not know how middle school students used to engage with life beyond childhood.

We are still creating that “new normal”.

At the Career Teacher Master Class at Murdoch this year, Dr. Chad Morrison explained that:

  • we don’t yet know the impact of COVID on students
  • we do know that kids are going to school less and engaging differently
  • Low SES students were less ready to learn online (Sonnemann & Goss, 2020, p7)
  • There would be a greater impact of social shocks on households, particularly low SES households with insecure incomes.

My 11-year-old grandkids have now started high school in the most disrupted academic year ever experienced in WA. Teachers have been off work with COVID. Relief teachers have tried to cover the gaps. My grandkids have been off school, then got into trouble from relief teachers for not having completed work. 

I suspect that any middle school students who had minor social and mental health issues two years ago, will not have had opportunities to engage in activities that would have helped them to work through their issues at their own pace.

Life is tougher for middle school students in 2022. 

Solutions for Exhausted Teachers

Teachers are burnt out. They don’t have the energy to build a village that will support middle school students.

Promoting existing services is an easy step that can be taken. 

School Chaplains

If you have a wonderful school chaplain, help them to engage with your students.

Community Services

I got in touch with the Department of Communities. They said that:

  • District Offices refer troubled students to the Department’s mentoring program. 
  • EdConnect has around 2000 volunteers who work across schools. EdConnect was mentioned by a few people when I put out a request for information on Facebook and LinkedIn.

It takes a village to raise a child

As I am becoming more aware of the bubble of COVID affected middle school students I have written:

In this final post  I have a Mentor and Support Services map. I will continue to build that as people let me know of additional services which students can tap into to create their own village. 

These opportunities will help students to create their own village as they move into adulthood. Getting started is the toughest step. 

I will continue to look for ideas that will help them to make the transition. 

Please join the In Focus Careers community to engage with others who are working to support career development in schools in WA.

Subscribe to In Focus Careers monthly magazine for West Australian schools. 

Bev Johnson Director, In Focus Careers
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Year 9 Boredom Breakers

Year 9 is always a tough year 

Just as Year 9s were starting to grow out of the things they loved doing as little kids, COVID hit.  There is a fair chance Year 9s are bored but not aware of opportunities that are on the table. 

We don’t know the impact of COVID Year 9s

  • Some may be bunkering down and need more encouragement to approach new ideas.
  • Some may be looking to take control and make choices about ideas to explore.

If they don’t know it, they can’t do it

Here is a range of opportunities that may spark an interest and which Year 9s can investigate. 

Go to the Mind Map to find links to information about all of these ideas. 

Ask Career Advisors and Student Services at School

If you want to know more about any of these opportunities, school based career advisors, student services officers and year coordinators will be able to help.

Some highlights that you may not know about

Duke of Edinburgh

Duke of Edinburgh
Duke of Edinburgh Awards

Age: 14 – 24 There are 4 sections:

1.      Adventurous Journey

2.      Physical Recreation

3.       SkillsVoluntary Service

4.       Gold Residential Project

CoderDojo

CoderDojo

Coding for Fun

Ages 7 – 17

Run by volunteers in libraries, unis and community centres. Young people and volunteers get together to learn to play with coding.

WAAPA Short Courses

WAAPA

Age 6 – 18

Acting, music and dance short courses are run on weekends and holidays.  There are classes for young kids through to those who already have some experience.

Local Government Youth Programs

Government Youth Programs

Every local government council has youth programs. Check out your local government to see what it has on offer.

RoboCup

RoboCup

Age: 12 – 19

Fun with Robots

Teams make and program robots and compete in different challenges. 

Find all the career information you need for West Australian school students