Growing Careers Project
This program gives young people the opportunity to acquire what they need to thrive post-school by enabling them to participate in multiple career programs.
Research shows that young people who can recall four or more encounters with the world of work, while at school, are far more likely to be in work, training or study in their 20s.
The Smith Family’s Growing Careers Project is supported by funding from the Australian Government through the Department of Education
How does the Growing Careers Project work?
The Growing Careers Project offers over 76,000 places for students to participate in multiple career programs across their secondary school journey. These could encompass anything from a short career-focused activity, to several weeks of one-on-one mentoring via an online platform – or spending a few days in a workplace.
The Smith Family will follow student participation across the five years of the project (2021-2025) in close collaboration with a number of schools across the country, to understand how they’re progressing in their education. We’ll look at what’s resonating with the students from a careers’ perspective and what more we can do to support their career pathways when they leave school.
Stories from the Growing Careers Project
Why is this project important?
• Young people’s involvement in work, training or study post-school is heavily influenced by what happens to them in school.1
• Young people living in disadvantage are less likely to complete Year 12 and less likely to be in work, training or post-school study than their more advantaged peers.2
• Employer engagement while still at school has a positive impact on academic results, student motivation and student aspirations.1
2. OECD (2018) Education at a Glance 2018: OECD Indicators. Paris: OECD Publishing.