Sport-Based Interventions as Non-Formal Education: Enabling the Education to Employment Transition for Young People
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Sport as Non-Formal Education/Learning
3. Sport-Based Interventions as an Enabler of the Education to Employment Transition
4. Methods
5. Building a Bridge: The Use of SBIs as an Alternative Form of Education to Employment Provision
[Most] have a poor home environment, in terms of worklessness … not being surrounded by people who have a routine of work. Maybe being the only one in the house having to get up and go to work at 9 o’clock. All of those things can be a real barrier … A big issue for a lot of our participants over the last 12 months has been living arrangements. A significant number would be living in supported housing arrangements, hostels, sofa-surfing, so on the cusp of homelessness.
… by the nature of their backgrounds, [these young people] are not ready to just go straight into a job … so I think we sort of recognise that there’s quite a divide between trying to get somebody who’s NEET into employment off the back of a three or four-day experience of working with us. So, I think [we’ve] recognised that there’s a bit of a bridge that needs to be built between being on [our] project to being employment ready.
… the ‘system’ has failed a lot of these young people. We don’t want to put them [straight] back in that system. We want to get them ready, for themselves first, get them ready for their community second, and get them ready to join the system third. And it works in that way.
… getting young people back into sport and getting them active is having massive impacts as well. So, you know, young people giving up smoking or drug use, you know, just fitness levels increasing … But actually, those sorts of lifestyle improvements also help if somebody is trying to move forwards with their lives and get into work.
I think that quite an important part of [sport and physical activity] is helping young people to navigate [employment] systems, which can be not the most welcoming or easiest to navigate. One organisation [that we fund] did some training with young people around how to navigate financial systems … like helping young people to get bank accounts when they don’t have bank accounts. You know, getting young people to engage with the Job Centre. I mean certainly, to be brutally honest, they [programme participants] wouldn’t be engaging with the Job Centre before they come onto the [sport-based] programme.
… some of [our clubs] had never been in their local Job Centre because they don’t necessarily do employability programmes. [But now] we’ve got a lot of our football clubs that offer the Youth Hubs … that were launched to tackle youth unemployment as a result of the pandemic. So, South Yorks United [pseudonym] is a youth hub; they have the DWP [Department of Work and Pensions] work coaches based in the club, and the young people go there, rather than the local DWP office.
What we know is, when we [consulted] our young people, they wanted one person and one contact to support them. They really felt that they were pulled from pillar to post; different training providers, job centres, job coaches, different people … We have key relationships with different job centres across the region, and actually a lot of our mentors … often they might spend an entire day based at a job centre. So, there’s that relationship with them, they know what we do. It’s kind of a win-win. They’ve [Job Centre staff] got to get their young people off their caseloads, and we can support by taking them onto our caseloads.
… we’ve run a number of ‘Introduction to’ courses and a lot of those ‘intro to’ quals [qualifications] were in things such as warehousing and distributing, because they wanted something that they could go to, do their eight hours, get paid and leave … We felt that traineeships were very much qualification based, they were very much kind of like, “You do this, you do this, you do your work placement, you get a job or an apprenticeship. Bye bye”. We are keen to get employers that can offer young people on our programmes career pathways, and not just a job for now. So, I think it’s really about finding the platform for participants to then move on with their career.
[We produce] job-ready young people, and they’ve gone through our intensive programme, they’ve really improved their life skills … [but] I also think it’s making sure that the jobs are meaningful jobs. There’s an issue with zero-hour contracts, sessional, seasonal roles. Underemployment is a big issue … and we don’t want to contribute to that, so we try and make sure it’s meaningful work (Ted, Chief Executive of a sport and employability charity).
… we believe that all young people should be excited and inspired about their futures, particularly around actually, what job, or more important, what career. Because I think a job is the day-to-day, a career, that’s where that energy and fire should come from. (Gareth, sports development manager, youth development charity).
6. Enabling the Education to Employment Transition via Sport-Based Interventions
… [we have a range of courses] that was about taking that first step into employment in our sector … We’ve got about 36 workshops which are mainly focused on either building your skills, understanding and working with young people, or building your skills at using sport [instrumentally].
When we talk about employability, I think people instantly think of employment. For us, we’ve done quite a bit of work on trying to change how that’s interpreted to actually mean skills development and preparing people to have a better opportunity later on in life for employment.
… you need to listen to them [employers] in terms of what are the skills that they [young people] need? So, when [a builder’s merchants] came in, they said: “You know, forget about the qualifications, what we need is young people that are going to turn up on time, and who are going to have the willingness to, you know, push themselves”. You know, it’s your work ethic, really.
I think there’s other important bits that sport programmes can build around the sort of the skills [that are required for employment] and really embedding those, and that young people are resilient, that they have aspirations, they’re confident, they can do challenge … rather than just “is your CV up to date?”
Definitely, definitely, the people [delivery staff]. That’s almost, I’d say second to none. Our projects are somewhat a reflection of that [programme] lead, and not the level of work that they put in.
… more than anything, it’s about their [mentor’s] ability to just listen, you know, to be able to understand the needs of each young person and work with them to work through challenges … For a lot of our young people, I think they kind of get to a point where they probably question whether the apprenticeship is still the right option for them. Often there are roles that come up that are probably better paid, certainly on an hourly basis, than an apprenticeship would be … Our best Learning Coaches are able to help our young people see that bigger picture and support them on a longer-term journey…
[Mentoring] is even more important when you’re talking about people with disabilities … that environment’s really, really, really key and to some extent, as well, having some structure, having some structure and some consistency. Lots of these young people don’t have structure and consistency and that’s partly why they don’t have the same opportunities as well.
We want our mentors first and foremost to be relatable to young people. They’ve got to speak to them at their level … Obviously it helps if there’s a strong level of lived experience there as well, which we know there is in our mentoring group, [but] they’ve got to get on with the young people; the young person [has] got to like them, otherwise it’s not going to work.
I’ve seen some brilliant sport-facilitated sessions, but I always wish they’d go a little bit further. Because I think you’ve got those young people, you know, you’ve got those relationships, [and] actually afterwards a conversation with those young people about what they plan to do, what are their goals, where do they see themselves, that’s the bit that I think sometimes can get missed.
… we’re looking at building more formalised support for our graduates … to sort of develop and invest in, [and] sustain that employment opportunity for young people … just to continue to support them and work with them. Once they finish their apprenticeship we can lose sight of them quite quickly, so the first step, really, is to continue to engage them in things like our development weeks [and] make sure that they are aware they can still access [other] opportunities around that long-term employability piece…
… we were conscious that for a lot of training providers people come on the programme, and then there’s a cliff edge when it finishes … So, we’ve actually built into a lot of our projects an eight-week post-programme mentoring … just so that there isn’t that cliff edge, so they still know they’ve got somebody that they can turn to … For a lot of beneficiaries, they come from backgrounds where maybe they haven’t got that support, and that’s why there in the situation or position where they’re in. It’s really dangerous to have that, and suddenly they know what it’s like to be supported … so we try to cut that sort of transactional kind of relationship out of the mix, because short-term it might be okay, but actually it doesn’t really do much for anybody.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym | Role | Description of Organisation |
Jane | National Operations Manager | Sport-based charitable trust |
Andy | Head of Education and Employability | Sport-based charitable trust |
Emma | Head of Foundation | Charitable foundation that funds sport-based projects |
Ted | Chief Executive Officer | Sport and employability charity |
Meera | Director of Design and Impact | Sport-based charity |
Steve | Head of Education | Social enterprise focused on tackling youth unemployment |
Emily | National Partnership Manager | Sport-based apprenticeship charity |
Mark | Sport policy manager | Organisation overseeing further education in England |
Hayley | National Director | Sport-based youth development charity |
Tony | Head of Programmes | Youth and disability sports charity |
Gareth | Sports Development Manager | Youth development charity |
Julie | Chief Executive Officer | Sport-based youth charity |
Rohan | Leadership Team | Youth development charity |
Sally | Director of Innovation | Organisation offering qualifications in sport and leadership |
Kayla | Programme Delivery Manager | Sport-based charitable trust |
Brendan | Founder | Youth employment social enterprise |
Amanda | Chief Executive Officer | Training and employment charity for young people |
Jacqui | Head of Programmes | Youth volunteering and employment charity |
James | Education Officer | Sport-based charitable foundation |
Eleanor | Youth Advisor | Sport-for-development organisation |
Salman | Youth Advisor | Sport-for-development organisation |
Theme | Core-Category | Category | Sub-Category |
Building a bridge to employment | Developing career readiness | Preparing the person | Physical health |
Mental health | |||
Lifestyle habits | |||
Inspiration | |||
Motivation | |||
Addressing barriers to employment | Fragmented home life | ||
Worklessness | |||
Socio-economic conditions of employment | |||
Disconnected young people | |||
Transient career support (‘pillar to post’) | |||
Supporting incremental transitions | Rebuilding trust | ||
Reconnecting with formal systems | |||
Navigating employment systems | |||
Connecting with government initiatives | |||
Offering continuity | |||
Enablers to employment | Taking a long-term, holistic approach | Transferrable skills for career readiness | Working with others |
Organisation | |||
Time management | |||
Formal qualifications | |||
Personal qualities | Work ethic | ||
Confidence | |||
Resilience | |||
Aspiration | |||
Mentorship | Quality interpersonal relationships | ||
Sustained involvement | |||
Creating an empowering social climate | Supportive | ||
Inclusive | |||
Structured | |||
Consistent | |||
Safe | |||
Qualities of delivery personnel | Relatable | Lived experience | |
Learned experience | |||
Likeable | |||
Attentive | |||
Empathetic |
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Morgan, H.; Bowles, H.; Bush, A. Sport-Based Interventions as Non-Formal Education: Enabling the Education to Employment Transition for Young People. Soc. Sci. 2025, 14, 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050278
Morgan H, Bowles H, Bush A. Sport-Based Interventions as Non-Formal Education: Enabling the Education to Employment Transition for Young People. Social Sciences. 2025; 14(5):278. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050278
Chicago/Turabian StyleMorgan, Haydn, Harry Bowles, and Anthony Bush. 2025. "Sport-Based Interventions as Non-Formal Education: Enabling the Education to Employment Transition for Young People" Social Sciences 14, no. 5: 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050278
APA StyleMorgan, H., Bowles, H., & Bush, A. (2025). Sport-Based Interventions as Non-Formal Education: Enabling the Education to Employment Transition for Young People. Social Sciences, 14(5), 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050278