SA Affordable Housing September - October 2019 // ISSUE: 78 | Page 5

NEWS No glass ceilings - lots of dry walls F ounded in 2003, the Saint-Gobain YouthBuild Academy has been supported by YouthBuild, an international NGO, since 2016. The academy is the only CETA (Construction Education Training Authority) accredited training provider in South Africa that presents the National Certificate: Ceiling & Partition Installation NQF 3. The collaboration between Saint-Gobain and YouthBuild prepares young people to meet construction workforce needs and to improve communities through the Community Asset Building (CAB) projects. Earlier this year, the French Minister of Foreign and European Affairs, Jean-Yves Le Drian, paid a whistle-stop visit to Saint-Gobain South Africa’s premises in Germiston, Gauteng, to see how the building materials producer is developing skills through its Saint-Gobain YouthBuild Academy. The academy’s objective is to bridge the artisan skills gaps and create a pathway into the labour market for disadvantaged youth. In the 16 years since its inception, the academy has graduated more than 1 000 students (including 30 deaf students), with about 75% of the 2018 graduates being placed into livelihood opportunities. Through their complementary expertise, the objective of Saint-Gobain and YouthBuild is to up-skill and educate unemployed youth on the theory, practice, and installation of environmentally compliant systems for new and renovated buildings. Students practise their skills by repairing and fixing local crèches, schools, and community halls in need. Saint-Gobain provides the ‘hard’ skills and YouthBuild the ‘soft’ skills on behavioural change, leadership and job readiness, which together address the social deficit that many underprivileged children face after an upbringing of poverty. Once the academy has selected the students, they are required to achieve competency in 132 credits clustered into four subjects. These include drywall and ceiling installation (safety, tools, and assembly of components); written and oral communication skills; applied mathematics (calculating quantities and costings); and workplace skills like understanding HIV/Aids, first-aid basics, and business plans. The programme runs for 12 months and has capacity to train 100 young people a year. LOTS OF SOFT SKILLS AND MENTORING What makes the programme so successful, is that it includes not just technical construction skills but the soft skills necessary to run a business: marketing; communication; quoting; getting paid; and quality control – which are the particular expertise of YouthBuild. It is a mental toughness programme to prepare graduates to establish their own businesses, where previously they might not have had the social acumen. In addition, students are trained (and expected) to pass on their skills to other unemployed individuals when they are employed on a site. The success of the academy stems from this characteristic: that its graduates are used on a construction site to not only perform their function, but in training local workers, with the latter thereafter counting towards the 30% of the value of a www.saaffordablehousing.co.za SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2019 3