Youth Opportunities and Awards
Job Oties
The Keystone Awards
Our training department recognises the contribution young people can make in running their own youth clubs and projects.
Job Opportunities
Youth Training Officer
We are looking to recruit somebody to co-ordinate and facilitate the delivery of BACYP courses which enables young people to further develop and grow to full maturity.
Your duties will include co-ordinating, collating and running of Keystone, Youth Achievement, Sports Leader Awards and AQA Awards across designated areas. Also to act as a workshop facilitator for the young people when they are completing awards.
The position is initially for 10 hours per week which would increase depending on workload. The salary rate is £7.00 per hour.
Youth Action Worker
Thatcham Youth Trust would like to offer the right person the opportunity to become the Youth Action Worker.
We are looking to recruit somebody to this exciting and challenging role, you will have had experience in either youth work or organising activities and be willing to work one night per week at a salary of £7.50 to £10.00 per hour depending on experience.
You will be responsible for the development of a programme of opportunities of young people who choose to meet in the area.
For more information on any of the above vacancies please contact Navin Jaitly on 0118 9784001 or 07747 476791
At BACYP we promote recognition of this through:
The Keystone Awards
The Keystone Award Scheme is the Clubs for Young People training programme to recognise the achievements, qualities and skills of young people.
Who is Keystone for?
The awards are designed for young people aged 13 - 17. There are four levels (from bronze to platinum) so year eight pupils can join and complete the scheme before they take their GCSE examinations. It is entirely voluntary and young people are not obliged to join the scheme or progress from one level to the next.
Why would it be popular?
Keystone is designed to be accessible to all young people. The scheme gives young people a chance to get proper recognition for the things they love doing. This is particularly refreshing if they find formal education difficult. Keystone also gives young people a simple, flexible framework for making a positive contribution in their communities.
Youth Achievement Awards
The Youth Challenge and the Youth Achievement Awards are an activity-based approach to peer education. The awards are designed to help develop more effective participative practice, by encouraging young people to progressively take more responsibility in selecting, planning and leading activities that are based on their interests. The peer group model encourages the development of a wide range of life skills through a flexible and informal approach.
The Youth Achievement Awards were introduced nationally in 1997 and are already well established in a wide range of youth organisations, schools and educational projects. Building on their success, the Youth Challenges were launched in 2002 - meeting the demand for a similar award for the lower age group. In all levels of the awards, young people are encouraged to take on progressive levels of responsibility through involvement in a wide range of self-identified activities.
The Youth Achievement Awards were initially established in the youth work sector as a means of recognising and accrediting young people's achievements through a peer group approach. More recently; schools, colleges, national charities, youth offender institutions, youth offending teams, Connexions partnerships and training providers are finding them an equally valuable tool in motivating and engaging their young people.
The Youth Challenges are internally certificated and are aimed at young people aged 11 to 14, although they may be appropriate for older or slightly younger people. The bronze to gold Youth Achievement Awards are aimed at young people who are 14 plus, with the platinum young leaders award being appropriate for young people of 16 plus.
The Youth Achievement Awards:
- Recognise and accredit young people's achievements
- Encourage progressive responsibility and ownership of learning
- Provide a mechanism by which to measure the quality of work with young people
- Reinforce good practice
- Encourage participation and social inclusion
- Use peer education
The awards enable young people to:
- Enhance self awareness and self-esteem
- Develop communication skills and resolve differences by negotiation
- Get on with and work well with others
- Explore and manage feelings
- Understand and identify with others
- Develop values
- Plan ahead
For more information about the Youth Achievement Awards, please visit www.ukyouth.org/yaa.
BACYP, together with Millennium Volunteers, is actively seeking new ways to accredit and reward young people for their contribution to the community and the lives of others.
- To find out more about BACYP, please contact us.


