FUTURE TALENTED Spring Term 2019 - Issue 2 | Page 23

Gatsby Benchmarks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 EMPLOYABILITY Education consultant Jane Delfino MBE outlines practical steps to building an effective, sustainable and impactful strategy to meet the Gatsby Benchmarks. s an education consultant specialising in employability and entrepreneurship, Jane Delfino MBE is understandably positive about the new emphasis on careers in schools. She has spent her own working life at the coalface of careers education, holding leadership roles in highly urban and challenging contexts. Underpinning her enthusiasm is the belief that “every child has the potential to be a successful and valued global citizen – and that with the right support this can be achieved”. However, she is aware of the constraints careers leaders face and the level of the challenge posed by the Gatsby Benchmarks. “Schools are facing challenges from all directions,” acknowledges Delfino. “A lot of them panic and think ‘it’s all about English and maths’. And, of course, it is… but it isn’t. If you only focus on those, you’re diminishing children’s life chances.” The (proverbial) ‘carrot’ for educators is this opportunity to transform lives, while on the ‘stick’ side, she warns that “people are starting to look at destination data and link it back to schools. If you’ve got 10% of your cohort NEET (not in education, employment or training), someone’s going to come knocking at your door,” she predicts. A How to create a sustainable careers strategy for your school FUTURE TALENT // 23