Programs should use work-based learning to develop participants’ understanding of and ability to navigate company and industry culture, as well as specific position functions and workplace policies and procedures.
Work-based learning activities should also help participants fully understand industry and workplace culture. This includes helping opportunity youth understand what to expect from workplace policies and procedures and how to navigate human resources and other supports that may be available.
It is critical that programs recognize how discriminatory practices show up in the workplace and prepare young people to maneuver within these environments. Programs should help young people understand structures and policies that spur discrimination based on gender, gender identity, and sexual orientation and should acknowledge how race is historically and structurally built into the workplace. High-quality pre-apprenticeships will ensure that young women, LBGTQ youth, and young people of color are properly supported and prepared for working in what may be majority-white, majority male, or majority cisgender environments by helping them understand how to navigate racial hierarchies and organizational policies that advance inequity. Programs can hold reflection sessions for work-based learning participants to share their experiences and identify and troubleshoot challenges they experienced.
This work does not rest solely on the shoulders of participants, and programs should ensure that employers are held accountable for creating positive and supportive work environments for young people. To do this, programs should actively engage employers in conversations about race, gender, gender identity, and equity. They should build commitments to hiring and supporting opportunity youth, young people of color, women and LGBTQ youth into partnership agreements, require employers to demonstrate how they will build safe and equitable work environments, and assess the quality of existing DEI policies and practices prior to placing participants. Programs should not partner with employers that are not able to provide work environments that are positive, safe, and supportive, and that provide equitable opportunities for advancement.