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41% of young people in the East Midlands would now consider applying for an apprenticeship scheme

41% of young people in the East Midlands would now consider applying for an apprenticeship scheme

Housebuilder, Redrow Homes, which is currently building across the East Midlands, has launched its annual report on perceptions of apprenticeships and careers in construction.

It reveals that most young people would now consider applying for an apprenticeship, and the majority of parents have discussed an apprenticeship role with their child. 

  • However, just 15% of young people in the East Midlands are receiving high-quality careers advice at school
  • While just under a third (27%) of young people in the East Midlands discussed a career in construction at school
  • 52% of 16-21-year-olds across the UK have never given a career in construction any consideration – the highest in four years, this increased to 59% in the East Midlands
  • 59% of Redrow apprentices believe there is no stigma associated with their role as a housebuilding apprentice – the highest number since the survey began

Now in its fourth year, Redrow’s report analyses the barriers to entry-level recruitment into the construction and the housebuilding sector, as well as Redrow’s recommendations to overcome these. Redrow once again canvassed 2,000 parents and young people, as well as over 100 of its own apprentices, and benchmarked the findings against previous years.

The results reveal that in the East Midlands, although misconceptions about construction roles remain, they are improving. Fewer young people (45%) and parents (55%) now believe a career in construction is dominated by men. Also, fewer young people believe that a career in construction involves mainly manual labour (22%). Interest in undertaking an apprenticeship is also on the up overall in the UK (see table 1). This year, the majority (55%) of young people in the East Midlands stated that they would consider applying for an apprenticeship scheme or are already partaking in one.

Perceptions have also changed amongst Redrow’s apprentices. This year, 59% believe that there is no stigma associated with being an apprentice. This is the highest proportion in four years – and 21 percentage points higher than in 2018.

However the number of young people considering a career in construction is at its worst for four years (48%), due to inadequate advice offered in schools and parent’s misconceptions, which then inform careers-focused discussions with their children.  

Careers advice at school

Overall, young people in the East Midlands are receiving inadequate advice in the classroom. When asked, just 15% stated that they had received high-quality information and advice on a wide range of careers at school and feel well-guided, while 15% of young people said that the advice they received was either non-existent or entirely not useful .

Parental influence

Parents are the number one influence on their child's early career decisions, but they are still lacking the appropriate knowledge to provide careers advice. When asked, 62% of East Midlands parents stated that they had never discussed the prospect of undertaking a career in construction with their child.

Differences also emerged when examining the annual income of parents in the UK. Households with an income less than £35,000 and more than £100,000 were far less likely to have discussed construction careers than households earning between £35,000 to £75,000.

However, when it comes to apprenticeships in general, parents are, in many cases, happy to support their child. A significant proportion (70%) stated that they have discussed the prospect of undertaking an apprenticeship with their child – this rises to 77% in London, and 76% in the East Midlands.

Karen Jones, HR Director at Redrow, commented,

“The challenge of attracting a new generation of talent is a topic all too familiar to the construction industry. This is fuelled by uncertainty around access to skilled labour from the EU following Brexit and the difficulties of replacing an ageing workforce. Against this backdrop, building in Britain is set to ramp up. Boris Johnson’s majority government has earmarked tens of billions of pounds for infrastructure spending over the next five years – including at least one million new homes, roadbuilding and improvements and major rail projects. However, none of this will be possible without the manpower to deliver.

“While it is fantastic to see there is now vast appetite for apprenticeship roles, we still have a job to do to encourage young people into construction roles. Changing perceptions and educating both children and parents plays a major role in shifting the status quo. It requires a more joined-up approach which engages with young people across the country, to promote accurate perceptions of what careers in construction involve and their benefits. We cannot afford to get this wrong, which is why we are so committed to investing in the next generation of construction industry talent. We’re aware that the graduates and apprentices of today could go on to become the business leaders of the future and we believe that there is a real opportunity to innovate in the way apprenticeships are being delivered.”

Redrow’s recommendations for driving increasingly positive perceptions of apprenticeships and careers in construction:

  1. A more collaborative approach between schools, government and parents
  2. Introduce an apprenticeship living wage
  3. Revise assessment of Maths and English skills to an applied assessment

Redrow Homes is building a range of developments across Derbyshire, Staffordshire and Leicestershire, offering two, three, four and five-bedroom homes, suited for families, couples and those looking to rightsize. Developments across the East Midlands offer great transport links, providing the perfect balance between town and country life.

For more information on careers at Redrow Homes East Midlands, please visit:

www.redrowcareers.co.uk/


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