1. NEW PUBLICATIONS
* New from ACYS
* New from YACVic
* New from you?
* 'It's crunch time: Raising youth engagement and attainment'
* 'How young people are faring 2007'
* Received for review / reviews pending
2. ABUSE
* Interventions to halt child abuse in Aboriginal communities
3 ARTS, MUSIC
* Australian Children's Music Foundation
4. CIVICS AND CITIZENSHIP
* Social Educators Association of Australia National Biennial
Conference 2008
5. CRIME AND JUSTICE
* Being 17 in Queensland: A human rights perspective
* Young people most likely to be victims of robbery
* Young people, crime and community safety
* 'Juvenile justice in Australia 2005-06'
6. DRUGS AND ALCOHOL
* Trends, statistics, news
* Conferences, seminars
* Living with parents who abuse drugs
7. EDUCATION
* Motivating and engaging boys
* Labour mobility and mutual recognition
of skills and qualifications
* InspirED (formerly, FutureLab Australia)
EDUCATION AND CAREERS
* 'Smart Start 2008'
* Career Advice Network Australia: Connections
* Vocational education and training (VET) news
* Did you know? A guide to VET in Australia
8. EMPLOYMENT
* Negative opinions about Gen Y
9. FAMILIES
* What support do families get with caring for the mental ill?
10. HEALTH
* Less sleep for today's youth
11. HISTORY OF YOUTH
* Journal for the History of Children and Youth
12. INCOMES AND EXPENDITURES
* Costs of children: FaCSIA 'Occasional Paper' n.18
* Closing soon: 2007 Financial Literacy Grants for schools
* Another Day Another Dollar
13. HOMELESSNESS
* Melbourne Citymission's Youth Homelessness Campaign 2007
14. INDIGENOUS YOUTH
* Vocational opportunities for Indigenous youth in regional Victoria
15. INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
* Kevlar for students in the UK
* DfES makes way for a new department
* Aiming high for young people: A 10-year
strategy for positive activities
* Ireland's Headstrong
* Young people and the aftermath of disasters
16. MENTAL HEALTH
* How to reach the hard-to-reach?
* The Australian Rotary Health Research Fund Project Grants
* Muslim helpline launched
* BRAVE Program for teenagers with anxiety
17. MENTORING
* Plan-It in WA and Victoria
* What defines a good mentoring program?
18. MOVEMENTS, CHANGES, MILESTONES
19. PARTICIPATION
* The Internet and youth political participation
* Youth parliament goes APEC
20. PUBLIC SPACE
* Young people and shopping centres
21. RESEARCH
* Australian Social Trends, 2007
* The social and economic impact of bereavement on families
22. RIGHTS
* Putting youth at the top of the agenda
23. RURAL YOUTH
* Reminder about Heywire: giving regional and rural youth a say
24. SUICIDE PREVENTION
25. VOLUNTEERING
* Youth Challenge Australia volunteers in Central Australia
26. YOUTH WORK
1. NEW PUBLICATIONS
New from ACYS
New from YACVic
New from you?
'It's crunch time: Raising youth engagement and attainment'
Ten main reform areas are suggested:
- successful transitions for all students from primary to secondary schooling;
- purposeful student learning during the "middle years";
- high quality vocational education in schools and in structured learning at workplaces;
- realistic and rigorous training and work options for students to complete their education;
- support for intermediaries and incentives for apprentices to complete their training;
- second chance options for young adults to complete year 12 or its equivalent;
- renewed purpose and scope for traineeships;
- personal support or mentoring for every potential early school leaver to make a successful transition to further learning or work;
- improved teacher support and preparation for 'hard to teach' students;
- an Indigenous presence in schools and support for Indigenous students and communities.
'It's crunch time' is available from both the DSF, http://www.dsf.org.au/papers/198.htmland from the Australian Industry Group, at http://www.aigroup.asn.auThe DSF MySpace page also features information on the report, including video clips of young people, teachers, mentors, support workers and spokespeople from social policy organizations talking about the programs and types of support available to help young people engage in learning and/or work: http://www.myspace.com/dusseldorpskillsforum(Source: Dusseldorp Skills Forum and Australian Industry Group 2007, 'It's crunch time for 306,000 young Australians', media release, 6 August, Dusseldorp Skills Forum, viewed 9 August, downloaded from: http://www.dsf.org.au/papers/198.html)
'How young people are faring 2007'
Australian school completion rates have barely shifted in the past 15 years, with Australia being ranked 20th among the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries for its school completion rates for 25- to 34-year-olds, according to Richard Sweet, a former senior analyst at the OECD, speaking at a 2006 forum on youth transitions, held by the Brotherhood of St Laurence. Those 24-year-old Australians who have not completed school or its equivalent are twice as likely to be unemployed as their peers who have completed that level of education. Only in the Czech Republic is that ratio higher. Citing this in 'How young people are faring 2007' (p.11) the Dusseldorp Skills forum adds that "real improvements have occurred in the level of full-time engagement of teenagers, school leavers and young adults", coupled with Australia's economic achievements in the past decade, which now give Australia a unique opportunity to "cement institutional arrangements to ensure that all young people are engaged, skilled and developed over the long-term ... not only for the well-being of young people and their families, but also because the ongoing need for a skilled workforce" and a looming demographic squeeze facing Australia. Data for 'How young people are faring 2007' was prepared by Mike Long at the Monash University ACER Centre for the Economics of Education and Training (CEET) in cooperation with the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Contact details: Dusseldorp Skills Forum, 1 Glebe St, Glebe, NSW 2037; ph: (02) 9571 8347; fax: (02) 9571 9703; email: info [AT] dsf.org.au; web: http://www.dsf.org.au
Note: Further information on school to work transitions is contained in a 2007 discussion paper by G. Quintini, J.P. Martin and S. Martin (Institute for the Study of Labor, Germany 2007), titled, 'The changing nature of the school-to-work transition process in OECD countries'. Its authors conclude that "there is agreement that, in order to improve youth job prospects, it is essential to combat school failure. In particular, early and sustained intervention can help prevent a vicious circle of cumulative disadvantages". Many OECD countries have managed to improve school completion rates, but "high youth unemployment remains a serious problem in many OECD countries". See: http://preview.tinyurl.com/29euzd
Received for review / reviews pending
- The other side of blue: What we learn through overcoming adversity, edited by Michael Colling, Finch Publishing, 2007
- Youth Work: Voices of Practice, by Jean Spence, Carol Devanney and Kylie Noonan; a research report by Durham University and the Weston Spirit, 2007.
- Australian Youth: Social and Cultural issues, 2007, Pearson Longman.
- Supervising doctorates downunder: Keys to effective supervision in Australia and New Zealand; and Doctorates downunder, both by Carey Denholm and Terry Evans, 2007, ACER Press.

