Latest reflections on the situation in England
“You never know what’s just around the corner” was a sentiment expressed in one of my recent headlines, and this was very much in evidence again in Week 242. It might have been a typically slow August week in terms of volume, but it certainly wasn’t without its share of intriguing highlights, with these being the pick of them:
- The Medical Doctor DAs (MDDAs) that I first reported on and included in my data in Week 240, but without having seen them actually advertised, have now been posted formally on the NHS Jobs website. As I previously mentioned they’re with East Suffolk & North Essex NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with Anglia Ruskin University and my understanding is that there are 25 places based in Chelmsford, Colchester and Ipswich, of which twenty are open to applicants with Level 3 qualifications (and therefore counted in my data) while five are reserved for graduates (and not included in my data). The closing date is 15th September 2024 for entry in September 2025, but applications are restricted to people who’ve attended locally-held information and screening events. The programme is designed to offer an alternative pathway for those who might not otherwise have gone to medical school and to contribute to “changing the current doctor demographic” with a view to it being more representative of local communities. There are also two distinct qualification requirements. Applicants meeting at least one of a set of Widening Access criteria need A Level ABB including two core sciences (Chemistry, Biology or Physics) or a T Level in Health or Healthcare Science with at least a B (core component) and Merit (specialism). Those not meeting any of the WA criteria need A*AA including two core sciences, or T Level Distinction with minimum A and Merit. There are some specific GCSE requirements too, and any applicants with an Access to HE Diploma (Medicine) would need a minimum score of 30 Distinction and 15 Merit. Meanwhile, the graduate places are open to applicants with a 2:1 or above in a science or allied health subject, or in a non-relevant degree but with at least a B in a core science A Level (or Access to HE Diploma equivalent). It will now be interesting to see if any other MDDA programmes are formally advertised elsewhere in the weeks or months ahead.
- In addition there has been a sudden little flurry of Adult, Mental Health, Learning Disability and Child Nursing DAs in Portsmouth, the Isle of Wight and Dawlish in Devon, with new cohorts due to commence in early 2025.
- Week 242 also saw the emergence of probably the most intriguing new DA occupation I’ve ever come across. The National Crime Agency posted 30 places for Serious & Complex Crime investigator DAs, with vacancies located in East London, Kingston, Heathrow, Gatwick, Slough, Chelmsford, Stevenage, Gillingham (Kent) and Winchester. The closing date is 8th September with a likely start date in June 2025 and a minimum entry requirement of 96 UCAS points.
- The other explosive highlight of the week was a batch of six Ordnance Munitions & Explosives (OME) Professional DAs with the Ministry of Defence based at Filton Abbey Wood in the prolific apprenticeship hotspot of North Bristol. Training for these roles includes periods of block release to University of Wales Trinity Saint David in Swansea. There are similar opportunities in Scotland too, see below.
- Speaking of hotspots, Watford was also a mini-hive of activity this week with a Chartered Manager DA at Watford Football Club and two Materials Science Technologist DAs with The British Board of Agrément who are an independent safety certification body for the construction and civil engineering sectors.
Finally, in a week sprinkled with LMI gems I was spoiled for choice as regards my featured image. However, inspired by the recent little surge of Nursing DA vacancies in Newport, Ryde and Sandown on the Isle of Wight, I’ve picked out a photo I took last month by the beach at Sandown whilst enjoying a coastal walk on the island.
Headline data (England)
Since 1st January 2020 I’ve been continuously tracking new vacancies that would be appropriate for Level 3 school/college leavers to apply for during their final year of full-time education or within a year of leaving. During the latest period from 19th to 25th August I recorded:
- 88 new Degree/Professional Apprenticeship vacancies (Levels 6/7) and
- 53 new Higher Apprenticeship vacancies (Levels 4/5)
- giving a total of 141 for the week
In the 242 weeks from 1st January 2020 to 25th August 2024 I’ve now recorded:
- 33,918 new Degree/Professional Apprenticeships (Levels 6/7) and
- 27,339 new Higher Apprenticeships (Levels 4/5)
- giving a total of 61,257
The average weekly totals across all 242 weeks have been:
- 140 DAs + 113 HAs = 253 average weekly total
Latest update on Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
Having also tracked new vacancies in the three other devolved nations since 1st June 2022, my latest running totals are as follows:
- Scotland: 1,162 vacancies at SQF Levels 10/11
- Wales: 299 vacancies at Levels 6/7 and 204 at Levels 4/5
- Northern Ireland: 173 vacancies at Levels 6/7 and 41 at Levels 4/5
My latest two-year Scotland report was published on my blog in June and I hope to post a September update in the next couple of weeks. Meanwhile there were five new GAs/DAs in Scotland this week, four of them being OME Professionals similar to those described above and based at RNAD Coulport in Loch Long, Argyll, with block-release, also as above, to UWTSD in Swansea.
I still intend to write another Wales report too, although collecting reliable data for this isn’t quite so straightforward. I recorded just one new DA in Wales this week, but it was an interesting one in the form of a Cyber Security Professional with Digital Health & Care Wales in Cardiff.
Updated occupational analysis
Every week I update my occupational analysis, breaking the England vacancies down into what I loosely define as ‘occupational areas’. In some cases these differ from the official apprenticeship standards terminology. For each occupational area the total number of vacancies since January 2020 is given below for both degree and higher apprenticeships.
Degree/Professional Apprenticeships (Levels 6/7):
In total there have been 33,918 new vacancies spread across 114 occupational areas and starting salaries have ranged from £5,590 to £36,822pa, with the average being somewhere in the middle at around £19K to £20K. The occupational breakdown is as follows:
5,550 Accountancy/Tax/Audit Professionals
4,696 Police Constables
3,323 Digital Technology Solutions: General *see below for details
1,484 Civil Engineers
1,430 Chartered Managers: General Business
1,335 Software Engineers/Developers
1,088 Project Managers: General
1,077 Chartered Quantity Surveyors
945 Data Scientists/Analysts/Engineers
858 Nurses (637 Adult, 153 Mental Health, 55 Learning Disability, 13 Child)
665 Electrical & Electronic Engineers
665 Nuclear Engineers
638 Design & Development Engineers
583 Manufacturing Engineers
492 Supply Chain Professionals
469 Building Services Design Engineers
454 Chartered Surveyors: Project Management / Real Estate / General Practice
449 Banking/Financial Services/Investment Professionals
434 Solicitors
404 Cyber Security Professionals
400 Aerospace Engineers
356 Digital Marketing Professionals
347 Professional Economists
330 Laboratory Scientists
329 Sales Professionals
275 Healthcare Science Practitioners (65 Biomedical Sciences, 52 Radiation Physics/Engineering, 33 Cardiac Physiology, 31 Nuclear Medicine, 24 Audiology, 22 Respiratory & Sleep Physiology, 21 Medical Engineering, 17 Neurophysiology, 5 Digital Healthcare Science, 3 Clinical Informatics, 1 Rehabilitation Engineering, 1 Renal Technology)
264 Environmental Practitioners
235 Food Technologists
221 Chartered Building Surveyors
218 Electromechanical Engineers
207 Chartered Managers: Retail Leadership
198 Railway & Rail Systems Engineers
190 Chartered Managers: Hospitality (Restaurants/Fast Food)
186 Construction Site Managers
167 Food/Drink Manufacturing & Production Managers
165 Control Technical Support & Control Systems Engineers
164 Operating Department Practitioners (NHS)
162 Project Controls Professionals
130 Occupational Therapists
122 Radiographers (65 Diagnostic, 57 Therapeutic)
114 Social Workers
113 Materials Science Technologists/Engineers
104 Digital User Experience (UX) Designers
94 Podiatrists
89 Design & Construction Managers / Architectural Technologists
84 Creative Digital Designers
82 Chemical/Process Engineers
80 Non-Destructive Testing Engineers
75 Chartered Managers: Recruitment Specialists
75 Town Planners
70 Building Control Surveyors
66 Packaging Technologists
64 Environmental Health Officers
61 Clinical Trials Specialists
54 Chartered Rural Surveyors (Land Agents)
53 Broadcast/Communication/Media Systems Engineers
48 Marine Engineers
46 Social Researchers
44 Human Resources & People Professionals
42 Chartered Managers: Manufacturing & Production (non-food)
42 Ordnance Munitions & Explosives Engineers
40 Marketing/Brand Managers
40 Transport Planners
39 Geospatial Mapping Specialists / Land Surveyors
39 Physiotherapists
36 Public Health Practitioners
35 Architectural Assistants
35 Chartered Managers: Social Change, Charities & Voluntary Sector
33 Chartered Managers: Hotel Management
33 Fire Safety Engineers
31 Journalists
30 Serious & Complex Crime Investigators
25 Aerospace Software Engineers
25 Chartered Managers: Sports Business & Development
24 Insurance Professionals
22 Midwives
20 Medical Doctors
20 Speech & Language Therapists
15 Forestry Professionals
14 Chartered Surveyors: Land Buyers
13 Environmental Engineers
12 Dietitians
12 Theme Park Engineers
9 Agricultural/Horticultural Advisers
9 Propulsion Engineers
9 Trading Standards Officers
9 Youth Workers
8 Chartered Managers: Buying & Procurement
8 Gas Transmission Engineers
6 Actuarial Professionals
6 Chartered Legal Executives
5 Chartered Managers: Fitness & Leisure Centres
5 Operations Analysts
4 Assistant Teachers / Learning Coaches
4 Chartered Managers: Theme Parks
3 Assistant Archivists
3 Digital Transformation Engineers
3 Education Technology Specialists
3 Orthotists/Prosthetists
3 Risk & Safety Management Practitioners
3 TV Production Managers
2 Facilities Managers
2 Licensed Conveyancers
2 Lighting Designers
2 Pensions Professionals
2 Robotics Engineers
2 Sonographers
1 Assistant Archaeologist
1 Community Centre Manager
1 Events Manager
1 Games Programmer
1 Human Performance Engineer
1 Resilience & Emergencies Professional
1 Service Designer
1 Space Systems Engineer
*DAs in Digital Technology Solutions (DTS) open up a wide range of roles. Some vacancies specify the role, while others are flexible. The three most frequently specified roles have been Software Engineer/Developer, Data Analyst and Cyber Security Specialist and I’ve recorded these as three separate occupations in my DA listings above (Data Analysts being merged in with Data Scientists and Data Engineers for the purposes of my reports). Meanwhile, those DAs listed as Digital Technology Solutions: General are either flexible or they lead to other specific roles. The following is a list of all the DTS roles I’ve recorded since 2020 and it now encompasses 121 different job titles, which I’ve subdivided into themed groups to make it a bit more digestible:
- Software Engineer, Software Developer, Software Tester
- Data Scientist, Data Analyst, Global Data Analyst, Data Product Specialist, Sales Data Analyst, Data Engineer, Data Architect
- Network Architect, Enterprise Architect, Digital Solutions Architect, Technology Architect
- IT Consultant, Solutions Consultant, Software Consultant, Software Implementation Consultant, Technical Consultant, Technology Consultant, Functional Consultant, Business Consultant, Dynamics Consultant, Security Consultant, Client Consultant, Application Management Consultant, Microsoft Dynamics & Power Applications Consultant, AI Technical Sales Adviser
- Network Engineer, DevOps Engineer, Solutions Engineer, Digital Solutions Engineer, Digital Engineer, Digital & Technology Engineer, Digital Manufacturing Engineer, Hardware Engineer, Systems Engineer, Business Systems Engineer, Controls Engineer, Control Systems Engineer, Automation Engineer, IT Engineer, IT Support Engineer, Technical Support Engineer, Service Desk Engineer, Cloud Engineer, Quality Assurance Engineer, Infrastructure Engineer, Telecommunications Engineer, Sales Engineer, Electronic Systems Design & Development Engineer
- Digital Developer, Application Developer, Business Systems Developer, Business Intelligence (BI) Developer, Automation Developer, Automation Test Developer, Full Stack Developer, Prototype Developer, WordPress Developer
- Innovation Technologist, Legal Technologist, Credit Trading Technologist, Global Equities Technologist, People (HR) Solutions Technologist
- Business Analyst, Business Technology Analyst, Cyber Security Analyst, Innovation Design Analyst, Agile Analyst, Applications Analyst, Applications Support Analyst, Technical Support Analyst, Operations Support Analyst, Support Desk Analyst, IT Support Analyst, IT Service Desk Analyst, Network Strategy Analyst, Global Mobility Analyst, Content Analyst, Security Operations Analyst, Process Mining Analyst, SAP Analyst
- Technology Manager, Junior Product Manager, Sales Account Manager, Sales Operations Manager, Platform Manager, Service Manager, Engineering Information Manager, Associate Digital Delivery Manager, Project Manager, Project Co-ordinator, IT Support & Helpdesk Administrator
- AI Implementation Specialist, Infrastructure Specialist, FinTech Specialist, DevOps/NetOps Specialist, Client Success Specialist, Digital Project Delivery Support Specialist, Information Management & Technology Specialist, Control Systems Specialist, Rail Signal Control Systems Specialist, Amazon Web Services Specialist, Supervisory Control & Data Acquisition Specialist, Fixed Telecoms Specialist, Scientific Computing Specialist, Technology Operations & Service Delivery Specialist, Solution Engineering & Development Specialist, Client Delivery Specialist, Microsoft 365 Product Specialist, IT Governance & Applications Support Specialist, Operations Resilience & Change Specialist, Innovation Foundry Specialist, Continuous Improvement & Automation Specialist
- Digital Development Officer, Public Health Intelligence Officer
- IT/Computing Technician, Second Line Support Technician
- User Experience Researcher, Content Strategist, Digital Social Media Executive
Higher Apprenticeships (Levels 4/5):
In total there have been 27,339 new vacancies spread across 154 occupational areas and starting salaries have ranged from £5,002 to £40,300pa. The average is around £17K to £18K, except for Sports Coaches which are usually between £8 and £13K. The occupational breakdown is as follows:
2,290 Sales Executives
1,819 Accounting Technicians
1,669 Data Analysts
1,667 Software Developers
1,610 Project Management Associates
1,386 Sports Coaches (Children & Young People)
1,066 Nursing Associates
814 Construction Site Supervisors
766 Manufacturing Engineering Technicians
709 Quantity Surveying Technicians
651 Taxation Technicians
649 Network Engineers
628 Business Analysts
495 Commercial Procurement & Supply Practitioners
489 Cyber Security Technologists
456 Civil/Site Engineering Technicians
455 Social Care Practitioners (Adults/Children/Families/Young People)
446 Software Testers
441 Public Relations & Communications Assistants
434 Electrical & Electronic Technician Engineers
379 Building Services Engineering Technicians
365 Investment Operations Specialists
342 Insurance Practitioners
330 Buying & Merchandising Assistants
312 Junior Management Consultants
296 DevOps Engineers
281 Marketing Executives
280 Retail Managers
280 Technician Scientists
268 Construction Design & Build / Architectural Technicians
267 Healthcare Associate Practitioners (150 Reablement, 69 Multidisciplinary, 14 Radiography, 9 Mammography, 6 Podiatry, 5 Speech Therapy, 3 Continuing Healthcare, 3 Intensive Care, 2 Dietetic Speech & Language, 2 Rehabilitation, 1 Critical Care, 1 Maternity, 1 Occupational Therapy, 1 Pre-Treatment Radiotherapy)
240 Associate Ambulance Practitioners
221 Early Years Lead Practitioners
210 Regulatory Compliance Officers
203 Policy Practitioners
195 Police Community Support Officers
189 Healthcare Science Associates/Technicians (64 Audiology & Hearing Aid Dispensing, 45 Medical Engineering, 39 Respiratory Physiology, 23 Genetics Technology, 4 Clinical Chemistry, 4 Tissue Retrieval, 2 Medical Physics, 2 Phlebotomy, 2 Rehabilitation Engineering, 1 Biomedicine, 1 Neurophysiology, 1 Nuclear Medicine, 1 Orthoptics)
176 Mineral Products Technicians
162 People Professionals / HR Specialists
160 Railway Engineering Technicians
153 Quality Assurance Practitioners/Engineers
148 Corporate Responsibility & Sustainability Practitioners
147 Food Production Technicians & Process Leaders
130 Air Traffic Controllers
129 Nuclear Technicians
128 Propulsion Technicians (Automotive/Aerospace)
123 Hospitality Managers
111 Intelligence Analysts
102 Vehicle Damage Assessors
100 Internal Audit Practitioners
94 Audiovisual Technicians
92 Actuarial Technicians
91 Journalists
82 Applications Support Leads
81 Financial Advisers/Paraplanners
78 Automation & Controls Engineering Technicians
77 Recruitment Consultants
76 Brewers
66 Business Operations Managers
60 Market Research Executives
60 Revenues & Welfare Benefits Officers
57 Learning & Skills Mentors/Coaches
55 Information Managers
54 Business Improvement Practitioners
54 Dairy Technologists
53 TV/Media Production Co-ordinators
48 Building Energy Management Systems (BEMS) Engineers
47 Engineering Maintenance Technicians
41 Housing/Property/Lettings Managers
41 Ordnance Munitions & Explosives Technicians
36 Paralegals
35 Countryside Rangers
33 Aircraft Engineering Technicians
29 Estate Agency Sales Negotiators
25 Engineer Surveyors
22 Land Referencers
20 Acoustics Technicians
20 Data Protection Officers
20 Digital Accessibility Specialists
20 Gymnastics/Trampoline Coaches
18 Digital Community Managers
15 Facilities Managers
15 Fibre Cable Engineers
15 Football Coaches
15 Smart Energy Engineers
14 Historic Environment Advice Assistants
12 Broadcast & Media Systems Technicians
12 Governance Officers
12 Hygiene Specialists
12 Passenger Transport Operations Managers
11 Film/TV Post-Production Technical Operators
10 Aviation Operations Managers
10 Counter Fraud Investigators
10 Employability Practitioners
10 Town Planning Technicians
9 Antisocial Behaviour & Community Safety Officers
9 Early Intervention Practitioners
9 Marine Engineering Technicians
9 Port Marine Operations Officers
9 Rehabilitation Officers (Visual Impairment)
8 Dental Technicians
8 School Business Professionals
7 Asset Managers
7 Computer Games Developers
7 Digital Product Managers
7 Fire Safety Inspectors
6 Digital Learning Designers
6 Music Teachers
6 Outdoor Learning Specialists
5 Broadcasting Technical Operators
5 Unified Communications Troubleshooters
5 Visual Merchandisers
4 Aircraft Certifying Technicians
4 Arboriculturists / Tree Officers
4 Culinary Chefs
4 Music Recording Technicians
4 Padel Coaches
4 Space Engineering Technicians
4 Tax Technology Technicians
3 Data Engineers
3 Fashion & Textiles Technologists
3 Junior Animators
3 Payroll Associates
3 Pensions Administrators
3 Sports Development Officers
3 Utilities Technicians
3 Visual Effects Artists
2 Auctioneers
2 Chaplains
2 Cricket Coaches
2 Energy Specialists
2 Health Play Specialist
2 Horticultural/Landscaping Technicians
2 Lifting Equipment Operations Engineers
2 Marine Pilots
2 Publishing Professionals
2 Travel Executives
2 Water Recycling Engineers
1 Chemical Process Technician
1 Conveyancing Technician
1 Cultural Heritage Conservation Technician
1 Customs & Foreign Exchange Expert
1 Fitness Club Manager
1 Fitness Instructor
1 Goalkeeping Coach
1 Health Informatics Specialist
1 Hotel Reception Manager
1 Lighting Designer
1 Metrology Technician
1 Proposals Co-ordinator
1 Scientific Instrument Maker
1 Small Vessel Chief Engineer
1 Tennis Coach
1 Wedding Accessories Designer
1 Wedding Venue Co-ordinator
1 Youth Justice Practitioner
Updated analysis by county and region
By county (loosely defined) the 61,257 higher and degree apprenticeships advertised in England since January 2020 have been distributed as follows:
- Greater London (13,525)
- Yorkshire (5,462)
- West Midlands (3,911)
- Greater Manchester (3,394)
- Bristol & Gloucestershire (2,989)
- Hampshire (2,202)
- Berkshire (2,000)
- Hertfordshire (1,407)
- Surrey (1,407)
- Cheshire (1,305)
- Tyne & Wear (1,293)
- Cambridgeshire (1,210)
- Nottinghamshire (1,152)
- Derbyshire (1,132)
- Cumbria (1,121)
- Sussex (1,114)
- Merseyside (1,037)
- Essex (1,012)
- Lancashire (1,003)
- Devon (948)
- Warwickshire (924)
- Buckinghamshire (895)
- Suffolk (891)
- Somerset & South Bristol (827)
- Kent (821)
- Dorset (769)
- Oxfordshire (759)
- Leicestershire (744)
- Wiltshire (738)
- Bedfordshire (719)
- Staffordshire (694)
- County Durham (587)
- Northamptonshire (496)
- Lincolnshire (487)
- Cornwall (438)
- Norfolk (437)
- Worcestershire (430)
- Shropshire (384)
- Northumberland (97)
- Isle of Wight (97)
- Herefordshire (66)
- Rutland (19)
- Remote-working or flexible location (112)
- Region specified but not county (87)
- Unspecified region (115)
Regional data: The table below shows how those stats add up regionally in the context of the local 15 to 24-year-old population. The population figures have been extracted from the latest ONS census data published in 2022 and my analysis provides the following information:
- First number in bold = the latest cumulative number of vacancies for each region
- Big number in brackets = the resident population of 15 to 24-year-olds in the region using the latest ONS data rounded to the nearest 100
- Third figure in bold indexes my apprenticeship figures against the 15 to 24-year-old population. The ‘index’ shows the combined number of DAs and HAs since January 2020 per 1,000 of that population and the regions are then ‘ranked’ accordingly:
- 13,525 London (1,078,600: 12.54)
- 6,718 South West (645,800: 10.40)
- 6,457 West Midlands (720,900: 8.96)
- 9,295 South East (1,040,500: 8.93)
- 7,860 North West (884,600: 8.89)
- 5,676 East of England (685,300: 8.28)
- 5,488 Yorkshire & The Humber (670,800: 8.18)
- 3,939 East Midlands (593,700: 6.63)
- 2,072 North East (313,000: 6.62)
- 112 Remote or flexible
- 115 Unspecified region
- 61,257 Total England (6,633,200: 9.23)
Whilst my data is always going to have flaws in it, I think the above comparisons give a fair reflection of the regional differences that exist. The South West’s prominence is perhaps surprising, with Bristol being a particularly busy hub.
- NB The Teesside area of North Yorkshire is in the North East region (not Yorkshire & The Humber) and North East Lincolnshire is in the Yorkshire & The Humber region (not East Midlands).
- The 87 vacancies for which the region was specified but not the county were in West Midlands (48), East Midlands (24), South West (9) and Yorkshire & The Humber (6).
Going forward
Although the project can’t go on for ever, I hope to continue posting regular updates in the 2024/25 academic year.
Footnote: How the data has been collected plus some general observations
Since 1st January 2020 I’ve kept a record of degree and higher apprenticeship vacancies posted in England and in doing so have built up an evolving occupational and regional analysis. I largely use data extracted daily from the government’s ‘Find an Apprenticeship’ website, whilst also keeping very close tabs on other national vacancy sources. I only record vacancies that are posted by or on behalf of specific named employers.
My target audience is Level 3 school and college leavers and those who influence and advise them. Therefore, I only include vacancies at Levels 4 to 7 that ‘work-ready’ 18/19-year-olds seeking their first permanent role could reasonably apply for, whether in their final year of school/college or after gaining up to twelve months’ temporary experience.
I use the term ‘work-ready’ because academic qualifications alone are never enough to compete successfully for a higher or degree apprenticeship. A UCAS points score of 112 is the most frequently quoted minimum entry requirement for DAs (sometimes more and often less), but it’s otherwise much more about the skills, qualities and insights an applicant can bring.
My data will never be fully reliable because not all vacancies are advertised nationally in a way that also gives an indication of precise numbers and locations. For that reason and others my reports always come with flaws, caveats and some editorial licence. However, I think the analyses I’ve built up paint a unique, intriguing and representative picture of what’s out there in a changing post-18 career landscape, as well as conveying a fairly realistic sense of comparative scale from both an occupational and regional perspective.
As a general observation I think it’s fair to say that there will never be enough degree apprenticeships to meet the potential demand, and where you live is a factor as well. To a certain extent there’s probably a mismatch between students’ aspirations and the actual occupations available too, which occasionally leads to reports of some of the less popular vacancies being hard to fill. In addition, only about 25% of overall apprenticeship vacancies are taken up by under-19s, which partly explains why my cumulative data falls well short of any official data based on apprenticeship starts. Meanwhile, a significant proportion of those Level 3 students who do take up apprenticeships will start on Level 3 programmes rather than progressing directly to Level 4 or above. The prominence of STEM occupations in my listings is also very noticeable.
One further significant observation is that NHS and other healthcare roles have become increasingly prominent in my data over time, thanks especially to the NHS Jobs website. However, these vacancies often stretch my criteria to the limit in terms of the maturity and experience they look for. Occasionally school/college leavers are actually mentioned in the person spec, but more often NHS vacancies are aimed at people with at least a few months’ experience or more. However, I’ve worked with a lot of young students in the past, especially those on Level 3 courses in the health and social care field and/or those with significant work/voluntary experience or caring responsibilities, who would be capable of making a very competitive application for such roles. Hence, I do include these vacancies if I think a mature 18/19-year-old would be considered, especially within a year of leaving school or college.
Finally, there’s sometimes an element of doubt about whether to include a vacancy under Degree or Higher. My approach to this is to count a vacancy as ‘Degree’ if it starts at Level 4 and moves seamlessly on to Level 6 or 7, but as ‘Higher’ if it starts at Level 4 with an option to progress to Level 6 as opposed to an expectation.
Although not stored electronically, I do have a written record of all 61,257 vacancies with details of the employer, occupation, location(s), minimum starting salary (if known) and, in the case of DAs, minimum entry grades and degree provider. As a guidance practitioner myself it’s been an incredibly illuminating and informative process, transforming my own perceptions about the labour market.
© Alan Bullock Careers, 26/8/2024