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Apprenticeships 2021

  • Using technology at home<br>Young african-american man is using laptop at home

    How apprenticeships could play a key part in the post-Covid economic rebuild

    Apprenticeship schemes have been cut back by the pandemic, but many employers say they plan to resume recruitment as soon as possible
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Space station in Earth orbit.<br>“My design space station on Earth orbit. The satellite has severalcommunication anten.Also it maybe SPY, GPS satelite.”

    UK space industry: engineering apprenticeships set for takeoff

  • Young man sitting on cushion meditating with eyes closed<br>GettyImages-1157368391

    Ditch the pyjamas, embrace easy wins: five working from home tips from a career coach

  • Portrait of waitress preparing table in restaurant<br>GettyImages-157284390

    Hospitality: can apprenticeships in the UK’s third-biggest sector bounce back after Coronavirus?

  • Disabled young man with an artificial leg is working at the furniture factory<br>Disabled young man with an artificial leg is working at the furniture factory

    Working with a disability: how can apprenticeships become inclusive?

  • ‘Oil is dead, renewables are the future’: why I'm training to become a wind turbine technician

  • Degree apprenticeships: higher-level study, but no uni fees? Yes please

  • Green jobs : why the wind is at the back of roles in renewable energy

  • Apprentices bring a fresh perspective to the UK's renewables industry – we need that

    Heather Hayes
  • Apprenticeships: 'People from BAME backgrounds are not getting through'

  • Employers on apprenticeships: ‘It’s proved to be a brilliant way of recruiting’

  • Investing in apprenticeship training is about to become easier for businesses

  • Diversity in adland: why Ogilvy is taking a creative approach to new hires

Apprenticeships 2020

  • Architect Young Man Working In Your Project.<br>Skills gaps could cost the average UK SME up £318,000 over the next five years – training up young talent should therefore be a priority.

    Apprentices: loyal, skilled, but still ignored by too many small firms

    Business owners who invest in apprenticeships are full of praise for on-the-job training, so why aren’t more SMEs embracing the schemes?
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Alex Waterfield and Apprentice Kate Nannery at the  Stanmer Park Campus of Plumpton College
Apprentice Kate Nannery at work at Plumpton College: 'It's the kind of opportunity that doesn't come about very often'. simonweller-theguardian-apprentice-2300

    Horticulture apprenticeships: the UK growers tackling a skills shortage from the ground up

  • Between 2014/15 and 2017/18 the number of GCSE-equivalent apprenticeship starts nearly halved. Office Professional Occupation Business Corporate Concept

    MBAs for CEOs: why it's time to change the apprenticeship levy

  • ◀ Stacy Gregory, left, a recent graduate from P&O’s apprentice scheme, works in an industry where only 5% of seafarers are female. 
Stacey & Marnie P&O

    Not just jobs for the boys: the women working in male-dominated sectors

  • ▲ An apprentice steeplejack gets to work in Kings Lynn, Norfolk photograph: GettyA young apprentice stop near the top of a city centre chimney during a steeplejack course in Kings Lynn, Norfolk. Using an elaborate system of harnesses and pulleys, the young lad is learning the skills to work safely and efficiently at dangerous heights and the town stretches below. Sponsored training is offered through the Steeplejack Industry Training Group Association and CITB-ConstructionSkills for young people aged 16. Applicants for this scheme will have to pass aptitude tests, literary a (Photo by In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images)

    Career paths: how these apprentices from the 1990s reached the top

  • Northern Ireland: how apprentices underpin Belfast’s fintech boom

  • ‘Training as a carpenter changed my life’

  • Autism to ADHD: thinking differently about recruitment

  • What are apprenticeships? Essential questions answered

  • An informal apprenticeship led me to a career in gardening – and TV

    Charlie Dimmock
  • Tanners, tailors and candlestick makers: a history of apprenticeships

  • As CEO, starting out as an apprentice taught me what drives people

    Mark Horsley

Postgraduate courses 2020

  • ▼BAME students make up 23.5% of all master’s graduates, but only 11.5% of humanities postgraduates  photograph: getty images<br>▼BAME students make up 23.5% of all master’s graduates, but only 11.5% of humanities postgraduates  photograph: getty images

    'I'm used to being the only brown person in the room': why the humanities have a diversity problem

    Cultural bias and a lack of plurality of voices may account for low numbers of BAME postgraduates in subjects such as history and philosophy
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Cheerful young woman studying with male friends at desk in university classroom

    Academia looks like a pint of Guinness to me – diverse below, but not at the top

    Prof Jonathan Wilson
  • ▶ Travelling abroad heightened Lucy Carruthers’ awareness of the climate crisis photograph: joanne crawford Guardian Labs, Lucy Carruthers. Newcastle, 12th December 2019. Photography by Joanne Crawford

    'The world is changing now': why education and climate activism go hand in hand

  • Ceramist Master Desktop<br>▲ The craft economy generates nearly £3.4bn a year in the UK
photograph: stocksy
view from above on the ceramist's desktop. The frame contains the master&rsquo;s hands working on the product, and around the cups are ready-made cups

    Meet the makers: how craft-based degrees are fusing tradition with innovation

  • ▼ Universities attract a less diverse range of students for postgrad degrees compared with undergraduates
photograph: getty images
Group Of Students Using Computers In College Library

    'People take on more debt to make ends meet': the cost of postgrad study

  • Call of the wild: the new science of human-animal communication

  • 'You're buying into an incredibly smart group of people': the enduring pull of the MBA

  • 'Volunteering is one of the most important things you can do': how one student is tackling the environmental crisis

  • Climate Champions Awards Nottingham City Council<br>For Guardian Labs.
Guardian Public Service awards. 
Pictured are the winners of the Climate Champions Awards from Nottingham City Council Energy and Transport teams.
(l-r)David Nicoll, Katie Greenhalgh, Sally Longford(deputy Leader of Nottingham City Council), Ruth Mulvany, Edward Gurney, Wayne Bexton, Becca Potts, Jason Gooding, Richard Wellings, John Mann, Rasita Chudasama, Catherine Middleton and Chris Carter.
They are picture on the Council rooftop amongst the solar panels.
Photo by Fabio De Paola

    Green new deal for Nottingham wins top Guardian award

    Ambitious policies, political will and long-term thinking push forward council’s plan to become UK’s first carbon-neutral city
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Dice Guardian Awards-7820

    Guardian Public Service Awards: workforce diversity winner

  • Charles Cracknell

    Investing in the future: youth worker voted Guardian's public servant of the year

  • Connect Project Team: Reason Digital and Turn2us at Reason Digital’s Office in Manchester with ‘Connection’ Josh.
Debby Mulling (blond woman with ponytail in the back)

    Guardian Public Service Awards: digital innovation winner

  • Kevin Coutinho, gender policy manager, University College London, and chair, Windsor Fellowship

    Guardian Public Service Awards: leadership excellence winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: public health and wellbeing winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: housing winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: workforce wellbeing winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: workforce learning and development winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: transformation winner

  • Guardian Public Service Awards: care winner

Social care 2019

  • Teenager Talking To Counsellor

    Is it right to use AI to identify children at risk of harm?

    Machine learning is being used to help protect children, but it raises ethical questions
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Adrian Routledge shows the ­‘multi-faceted’ nature of his work supporting Alex Woolfe.

    Jobs for the boys: the drive to get more men into social care roles

  • Care workers Kerry Munro, left, knew her friend Sam Mitchell, right, would suit a career in social care.

    Refer a friend: can an app tackle the social care recruitment crisis?

  • Teen with long hair looks at phone on bed<br>Teenage Girl on bed at home texting on her phone

    'No child should be moved away': why councils are opening new children's homes

  • Medical Class<br>▲ Creating an integrated workforce would improve the experience of those receiving care  PHotograph: Stocksy

    Could a new apprenticeship bridge the health and social care gap?

  • From pain relief to memory prompts: the apps helping people with dementia

  • 'A home for life': extra-care housing helps older people stay independent

  • Housing for older people: provision across regions is a postcode lottery

  • Building homes is no good if they fail to meet our needs as we age

    Caroline Abrahams
  • The current social care system is a distant stretch from the one imagined

    Julie Ogley
  • We need to reclaim the founding principles of 1989’s Children Act

    Rachel Dickinson
  • Goldsmith Street social housing in Norwich (have won a RIBA National Award) by MIKHAIL RICHES architects

    The right housing in the right place – the councils investing in quality homes

    Local authorities are increasingly building smart, environmentally friendly and beautifully designed homes
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • ▼ Susie Pasotti works with young people in rural Gloucestershire
 photograph: 
Jody Daunton
Susie Pasotti. A neighbourhood officer for housing association, Rooftop

    'They find the city intimidating': I help young people in rural areas broaden their horizons

  • ▼ Lack of funding has forced many families into unsuitable dwellings, such as converted shipping containers  photograph: getty<br>HANWELL, ENGLAND - AUGUST 23: Nasibah Yagoub, 21, poses for a photograph with her 7 month old son Youssef outside the front door to their accommodation at a development of converted shipping containers that are being used as social housing for homeless families on August 23, 2019 in Hanwell, England. Nasibah and her family were moved to one of the containers 6 months ago and is not happy about the accommodation. A new report from the children's commissioner for England has said that children growing up in such temporary housing are having their health and wellbeing put at risk. A number of temporary housing sites across Britain, including converted office blocks and shipping containers, have come under question in recent months. (Photo by Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images)

    Social housing crisis builds as government passes the buck

  • ◀ Dorota Skrzek:‘I used to be scared of people and struggled with depression, but this has made me a stronger person.’
Guardian Labs - Housing Supplement, Dorota Skrzek. Photography by Joanne Crawford

    Homes for the homeless: ‘I did lots of painting. This house is my castle’

  • Gwydir St

    Councils and housing associations must pool resources to turn ideas into reality

    Barbara Spicer
  • Home refits: Wales leads the way on rapid response home adaptations

  • Small-scale campaigns reweave the bonds of trust between different communities

    Angus Ritchie
  • Homelessness: rough estimates fail to tell full story

  • Falling supply and rising demand: the story of social housing – timeline

  • ‘People deserve better’: tenants, activists and academics on the state of social housing

  • Kathryn Williams, Beverley. Clearing guide 2019. Photographed by Joanne Crawford

    'Landlords have raised their game': how to find a student flat after clearing

    Worried about where to look for accommodation if you got a university place through clearing? Don’t panic – there are still plenty of options
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Emma Dobson, 22, is a final-year psychology and sociology undergraduate at Brunel.

    ‘Your disability isn’t a barrier’: what it's like to go to uni as a disabled person

  • Melanie Lehmann, 24, sells clothes on Depop.

    How secondhand clothes can save student budgets – and the planet

  • Tahmid Ali, 20, is a second-year accounting and financial management student at the University of Hull.

    How to ace a university open day: ‘Plan your time, and who to speak to'

  • Karen and Samantha Pettitt.

    ‘They kept me level-headed’: what parents can do to help during clearing

  • Keep calm and carry a personal statement: staying cool during clearing

  • ‘Orphanage volunteering’ out, no-fly trips in: how to gap year in 2019

  • Rents, racism and the climate: why student activists have more to fight for than ever

    Ilyas Nagdee
  • From summer jobs to scholarships – key pointers on paying for your degree

  • Change course: how to rethink your degree if you miss your grades

  • Leadership, organisation, resilience: how university societies boost your employability

  • Ditch the rota: how to share a student kitchen

  • Clearing 2019: what students can expect and how they can succeed

  • ▼ Khobhi Kromel-Agamah Williams has avoided credit and an overdraft photograph: Max Miechowski

    Fees and funding
    ‘Think of your loan as a graduate tax’

    A university education won’t come cheap, but you may be entitled to more help than you thought
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • ▲ Open day at Hull University Press or Publication-Hull University Open Day - Saturday 7th July 2018-28

    Open days
    How to make uni visits worthwhile

  • ‘Mum encouraged me to ask questions I felt awkward asking’: Fiona and Sammie at the University of Gloucester’s fine arts degree show.

    ‘Inject some realism’: a parent's role on uni open days

  • ▼ The Browns: mum Sharon, dad Malcolm and daughter Emily photograph: david severn University of Hull BA Business and Marketing student Emily Brown at home with her parents, Malcolm and and Sharon Brown in Lowdham, Nottinghamshire. Emily is showing her Dad a book given to her by Jaguar Landrover during her placement year with the company.

    'It took months to get used to barely hearing from her’ – one family's university story

  • ▶ Carol Wilhide Justin graduates from the Royal College of Art, supported by daughter Celia

    ‘My son going to university made my own course possible’

  • ‘I loved my time at uni. I struggle to remember anything bad’ – alumni stories

  • Personal statements
    How to help students sell themselves

  • Choosing a course
    ‘Prioritise your future journey’

  • Food
    How to eat on a budget

  • 'Facebook is their world, not mine': how to be a parent when your child goes to uni

  • Packing for uni
    Essentials for a happy home

  • Kids off to uni? Here's how you can help

  • Student digs
    From halls to houses (and the family home)

  • STEPHEN JONES - EARLY CAREERS<br>PORTRAIT OF STEPHEN JONES AT GOLDIE LEIGH HOSPITAL FOR THE GUARDIAN

    Nursing
    It’s time for more men to make a mark on the ward

    Historically nursing has been seen as a career for women but, as more men enter the profession, the gender imbalance is being addressed
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Co-working Life.Team working in a project sitting in a beautiful office.

    Top tips on how to land your first ‘proper’ job

  • Sophie Harris, left, and Suzanne Dean both work in the design department of publisher Vintage

    Publishing
    Why there’s no such a thing as a career done by the book

  • Team Work Makes The Dream WorkBusinesspeople working together in the office

    For young job seekers, a potential workplace needs to be woke

  • Schoolgirl Works with her Teacher in Elementary Class<br>A schoolgirl works through a textbook with her teacher in elementary class. This is a school in Hexham, Northumberland in north eastern England.

    Could a new strategy encourage more grads to stick with teaching careers?

  • Midwifery
    A healthcare role that delivers a ‘very rich career’

  • Graduate schemes
    A route to the top – straight after leaving university

  • Despite the challenges of job insecurity, there are things for young people to feel hopeful about

    Laura Gardiner
  • Internship, grad scheme or apprenticeship – which route into work is best?

  • Policing
    Could you be part of the changing face of the force?

  • How lifelong learning will land you a career you love

  • To create better solutions, the tech industry needs to build diversity into everything it does

    Sheree Atcheson
  • Young female engineers working with helicopters

    How changing attitudes are closing the gender gap in engineering

    Although the industry is still dominated by men, job satisfaction and the financial rewards are helping women push for change
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Sound engineer Beth O’leary 007

    ‘You lift with your mind, not with your muscles’: female sound engineers on working in audio

  • Trevor and Ruth John bond over their mutual love for engineering: Ruth John and her dad Trevor for Guardian Labs

    Family
    Theory of relativity: Parent-daughter duos with a shared love of engineering

  • (Mother and daughter examining molecular model)

    ‘Teachers can change things’: tackling the maths and science shortage

  • Sound engineer Marta Salogni in the Strong Rooms, London

    Digital masters: how new initiatives equalise women in sound

  • Girls will see a path for themselves if we show how engineering makes a difference

    Naomi Climer
  • Women in power
    Why the energy industry needs more female engineers

  • 'Focus on sustainable change’: tackling sexism in civil engineering

  • Apprenticeships
    ‘I fell in love with coding’: millennial women on life in engineering

  • Bridging the pay gap
    The problem of female stereotyping in construction

  • Work
    How returnships are welcoming women back to engineering

  • Education
    Can coding clubs diversify the tech sector?

  • ▼ GPs are keen to adopt ‘social prescribing’ on the NHS as a form of mental health treatment photograph: getty For use with Mental Health Supplement - Sydenham Gardens

    Green therapy
    How gardening is helping to fight depression

    A growing movement is promoting the role gardening can play in patient recovery and rehabilitation
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Arun Chidambaram case study for Mental Health Supplement.

    NHS
    'It was a leap of faith but we knew it could work': the new roles in mental health care

  • ▲ The Mental Health Foundation wants emotional wellbeing to sit at the heart of school curriculum photography: getty<br>A multi-ethnic group of young school children are indoors in their classroom. They are sitting on pillows and doing yoga together. They are sitting with their hands in their lap.

    Schools of thought: can mindfulness lessons boost child mental health?

  • ALEXIA HARRISON case study for Mental Health Supplement.

    How much does poor body image affect mental health?

  • Rebecca Dignum  Case Study for Mental Health Supplement

    'It's sitting on the backburner': why acute mental illness is being forgotten

  • Technology
    How VR is transforming mental health treatment

  • The 'independent advisors' improving mental health after domestic abuse

  • Crisis response: why emergency services are enlisting mental health specialists

  • 'It's given me hope': the rapid growth of mental health recovery colleges

  • Psychiatry
    'There's a stigma in training': the battle to find mental health workers

  • It’s time to overcome mental health stigma in the NHS workplace

    Jill Maben
  • Suicide bereavement: how crisis support prevents further harm

  • Wellbeing at work
    Why looking after workers' mental health makes sound business sense

Apprenticeships 2019

  • Dan Clay NHS Healthcare Case Study

    The NHS apprenticeships offering a new route to health and social care

    As health and social care faces ongoing recruitment woes, new degree-level apprenticeships put clinical careers back in reach for more applicants
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • ‘There’s so much I’ve learnt from the course that I’m putting into practice at work’: Liam Murray, apprentice recycler

    Don't waste it: unusual apprenticeships for a career lift

  • Marjana Uddin BBC Credit Edwin Ladd

    Two years in, is the apprenticeship levy still working?

  • Ramp Work Experience<br>Work Experience on the Ramp
Taken: 24th March 2017
Picture by: Stuart Bailey

    A rise in apprenticeship wages is tempting those put off by tuition fees

  • woman using a drill

    How schools and businesses are addressing the Stem diversity gap

  • A shoe-in: how apprenticeships put farriery back on track

  • Apprenticeships can boost the NHS workforce – but it's not a quick fix

    Brian Webster-Henderson
  • The advertising industry has a diversity problem – apprenticeships can help

    Sue Frogley

Postgraduate courses 2019

  • Human and robot hand connecting

    Jobs of the future: are you ready to join in?

    If you want to reskill, a tech-related postgraduate course could future-proof your career
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Thais Russomano, pictured outside the Rio de Janeiro planetarium.

    'I always knew I wanted to be an astronaut': the doctor who turned to space science

  • Content coach reviewing notes of female company newcomer. Middle aged man in tie and young Indian woman in casual wear thumbing notebook in coworking space.

    Master's apprenticeships: elevating managers to the next level

  • People laughing outside Said Business School, Oxford, November 2017

    Soft skills, hard to beat: why MBAs are an investment in your future

  • coffee shop worker with digital order screen<br>a young coffee shop worker entering the order into the a digital display screen

    Finance your postgraduate degree: grant, scholarship and loan options

  • Media reboot: the real story is the rise of data

  • Postgrad courses must cultivate emotional and organisational traits too

    Alison Wood
  • Study in ... Glasgow: it's chic and cheerful

  • Postgrad pressure: 'the expectations can feel impossible to sustain'

  • Storyhouse Chester<br>For Guardian Labs Public Services Award supplement.
Pictured are some of the Library team based at the Storyhouse complex in Chester.
Pictured are Rachel Foster, Jane Hockenhull, Caroline Dunseath, David Fowler, Carol Hanson, Nikki Jennerway, Sara Wade-Vuletic, Claire Oxley and Jane Hockenhull.
Photo by Fabio De Paola

    Chester's award-winning library puts culture at heart of transformation

    The Storyhouse library, theatre and cinema in Chester, run by the council library services team, wins top Guardian prize
  • Download the supplement (PDF)

  • Annette Smith from Morecambe, Lancashire as been nominated for a Guardian Public Services Awards, she set up the Morecambe Bay Foodbank in 2012

    'We see the smiles and the tears': food bank manager wins Guardian award

  • PSA article illo 2

    Guardian Public Service Awards 2018: the finalists

  • The Guardian Public Service Awards winners, 27 November 2018 held at The Lindley Hall, central London.

    Guardian Public Service Awards 2018: all the winners

  • Sponsors

    Guardian Public Service Awards 2018: sponsors

    Social Care 2018

    • Kids and nanas at Albany Care Home

      Children in care homes: 'It makes residents feel more human'

      The more time young and old people spend together, the more both parties benefit
    • Download the supplement (PDF)

    •  HMF2191

      Career changers in social care: ‘They have life experience and empathy’

    • Children take park in the activities during kids time at the FAST graduation at Watercliffe Meadow Community Primary School, Near Sheffield Sheffield / 10.7.18 / Bethany Clarke Bethanyjclarke@mac.com 07793072964

      Children's services: why spending now will pay off in the future

    • Smiling man with home carer

      Despair is not an option: we need to build a better future for social care

      Julie Stansfield
    • Gardening at the Farm<br>A group of people help out in the community garden at the local farm.

      Our social care workforce is dedicated to making an impact

      Glen Garrod
      • Birds-eye view of business<br>High angle shot of a team of businesspeople meeting around the boardroom table in the office

        Could you become a software developer in nine weeks?

        Tech boot camps promise to take you from rookie to pro in just nine weeks, but do they deliver?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Development web, developer.Woman hands coding html and programming on screen laptop, development web, developer.

        Rise of the machines: why coding is the skill you have to learn

      • Finding the right mentor will depend on the type of support you need.

        Why a great mentor can do wonders for your tech career

      • Guardian - Tech apprenticeships-Final (1)

        The gender gap: 'Girls shouldn't listen to anyone who says tech isn't for them'

      • Nuala Murphy

        ‘The secret to tech success as a woman? You’ve got to lean in’

        Nuala Murphy
      • Fintech: are you ready to get on board for the boom?

      • ‘It’s a caring environment’: how codebar is building a diverse tech community

      • I taught myself to code – the best programmers all do

      • 'Wider work and life experience': why the tech sector needs to recruit mature workers

      • From coding apps to startup culture: young and mature tech workers share their views

      • So long, London: why startups are choosing to leave the capital

      • Olivia Capocci knew her A-levels hadn’t gone well enough to secure her law place, but one 10-minute call turned her fortunes around.

        Clearing 2018: what to expect, who can benefit and how to succeed

        It’s a buyer’s market for students going through clearing, so even students holding offers should consider rethinking their choices
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • track

        Three ways to secure your university future after A-level disappointment

      • Cloud<br>helium balloon with face standing on river

        Better A-level grades than expected? Time for Ucas adjustment

      • ‘The self-esteem dent doesn’t iron itself out easily, and a pressure to appear happy doesn’t help.’

        What to do when A-level results day goes wrong

      • Powder paint splashing on young manColourful powder paint splashing on young man against black background.

        Clearing: how to make sure you get an offer you can’t refuse

      • Halls or no halls? How to pick decent university accommodation

      • Student finances: the lowdown on loans – and how not to blow the lot

      • University open days: your turn to ask the questions during clearing

      • What should I pack for my first term at university?

      • Mental health at university: know where to find support

      • Mature students who embrace clearing: 'Getting a degree was life-changing'

      • How to get a degree without going to university – and other life routes

      • Unicycles, skydives and stand-up: five out-there ideas for a new student hobby

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Singled OutGroup of Table Tennis Balls bouncing. The One orange ball is higher than the white balls.

        How savvy employers are finding standout graduates

        Campus yoga sessions, artificial intelligence and escape rooms? Welcome to the brave new word of graduate recruitment
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Alex Botham, graduate social worker

        Graduate experience: ‘I was quite scared about working on the frontline of social work’

      • Public sector jobs for graduates: find the best route into a meaningful career

      • Group portrait of confident male and female computer programmers standing together in office

        More graduates are choosing further study

      • Abigail Lewis, managing editor at Target Jobs and compiler of The Guardian UK 300

        Personal qualities count in today's graduate market

        Abigail Lewis
      • Engineer a career that shapes the future

      • Graduate experience: ‘Everything in life is to do with tech these days’

      • What the gender pay gap means for graduate recruitment

      • An internship could be your golden ticket to a graduate job

      • Degree apprenticeships: train on the job and gain a qualification

      • Women in tech: the IT firms tackling the gender imbalance

      • How virtual reality is reshaping recruitment

      • How to remain employable in the 21st century

        Dr Paul Redmond
      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • African-American parents helping daughter move<br>Mature African-American parents helping their daughter relocate, perhaps into an apartment or college dorm. They are walking and talking, carrying the young woman's household belongings in laundry baskets and a suitcase.

        The university years: a chance for children and parents to discover new interests

      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Students in the kitchen

        How to prepare for uni: a few key life lessons to smooth the transition

        Brief them on a few simple recipes, cleaning up and time management, and your children will be as ready as you could hope for
      • University study abroad: good for the character and the bank balance

      • ‘See the positives, revisit old interests’: how to cope with an empty nest

      • Wellbeing at university: why support is a priority

      • University open days: everything you always wanted to know about X

      • What's it like to live in university halls?

      • University accommodation: on or off campus, at home or in halls ... it’s up to you

      • From parties to politics: how student life has changed

      • Loans, grants and bursaries – how university funding stacks up

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.

      NHS at 70

      • Doctor listening through stethoscope to middle-aged man+s chest

        'It's revolutionary': staff and patients on 70 years of the NHS

        The health service has been through many changes since 1948 – as we hear from some of the people closest to it
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Surgeons operating

        NHS at 70: the health service is at a critical point in its lifetime

      • Health - THE NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE<br>FIRST BABIES BORN ON THE NHS (NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE) UNDER THE NEW HEALTH ACT.

        Maternity services set for more change as the NHS hits 70

      • Coal Mine  Tredegar   Wales

        Why the south Wales town that forged the NHS now points to its future

      • Doctor examining mouth of patient

        ‘Holding the risk for the NHS’: the vital role played by GPs

      • Future-proofing the NHS: how the UK's largest workforce is gearing up

      • 'Handmaidens no more': what is the future for nursing?

      • Nine advances in medical science that help the NHS save lives

      • Mental health care: have services really been transformed?

      • Young people can be champions of change in mental health care

      • The NHS vanguard schemes aiming to deliver quicker, better care

      • In the maxed-out NHS, pharmacists are just what the doctor ordered

      • How addiction took hold of the UK – and cost the NHS millions

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.

      Apprenticeships 2018

      • Girl and her mentor<br>Senior man and young girl working on her bike in a workshop together.

        New-style apprenticeships: are they living up to expectations?

        Taking their cue from industry, new-style apprenticeships were heralded as a way to broaden vocational training all the way up to degree level. However, take-up has been mixed
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Smiling couple studying in cafe<br>GettyImages-554995573

        How to find the apprenticeship course for you

      • Tyron Sheppard, glassblower

        ‘It was hypnotic; I fell in love’ – the apprentice glassblower's story

      • Anne Milton MP. Commissioned for Society

        Skills minister Anne Milton: ‘The default should not just be university'

      • Student learning how to do building work<br>GettyImages-758283799

        New-style apprenticeships: all the education, none of the debt

      • Media makeover: how TV turned to apprenticeships

      • 'Our village was flooded. This is important work': the flood defences apprentice

      • Apprenticeships pay – but you're not rich yet

      • Apprenticeships are a European rite of passage – what can the UK learn?

      • Interested in working in healthcare? An apprenticeship could be for you

      • From Barclays to Boots, apprenticeships are transforming management training

      • Stable hand, beekeeper … trainee spy: the unorthodox apprenticeships filling a niche

      • How apprenticeships moved out of the workshop

      Top Employers UK

      • Businesswoman leading team meeting<br>Design professional presenting project to colleagues

        Unlimited holidays and golden hellos: how modern workplaces attract talent

        Millennials have brought a different perspective to the workplace – gone are the days when all employees looked for was a decent wage. So what does a good workplace look like in 2018?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Dinosaurs hugging<br>Digital painting of two plastic dinosaurs hugging each other.

        Happiness begins at work

      • Three people crawling out of round opening in coloured wall

        From glass floors to ceilings: how do we improve social mobility?

      • toy robots lined up outside childs bedroom<br>GettyImages-82567354

        Want to know if a leader is good? Ask their team

      • IF Azraq Highres-8311 (1)

        Why giving back is the best way forward for businesses

      • Will a robot recruiter be hiring you for your next job?

      • Health and safety – it's about the bottom line, not just bad backs

      • The appraisal is dead. Long live the catchup

      • Your happiness is our business: HR leaders reveal how they keep staff content

      Postgrad courses 2018

      • Mother working on laptop, daughter on table

        Could an online postgraduate course be right for you?

        Online courses and part-time study give a degree of flexibility to fit in with students’ lifestyles
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Older man reading book in library and writing notes

        Never too old for new tricks: the joy of being a mature student

      • University of Liverpool Open Day.

        What makes a good postgrad open day?

      • Curious juvenile green sea turtle.

        The Blue Planet effect: why marine biology courses are booming

      • Couple talking to woman taking

        Mediation – the postgraduate course that's never been more vital

      • County Hall, Hertfordshire County Council. Sue Williams and family safeguarding team leaders

        Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 overall winner: Hertfordshire county council

        An overhaul of how to approach families is yielding outstanding results and has won Hertfordshire the care award and overall title
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • David Brindle

        Guardian Public Service Awards 2017: Congratulations to all our winners

        David Brindle
      • Stephanie Burgess, who leads the Airedale Stammering Therapy Project.

        Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 digital and technology winner: Airedale NHS foundation trust

      • Hi-vis man in shop

        Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 finance winner: Warwickshire county council

      • The Award Nominated Therapy Team at Highgate Primary School in London

        Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 health and wellbeing winner: Highgate primary school

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 leadership excellence winner: Paul Allen

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 housing winner: Hope into Action

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 learning and development winner: Swansea council

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 recruitment and HR winner: Greater Manchester Police

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 Public Servant of the Year winner: Stephen Smith

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017: the runners-up

      • Guardian Public Service Awards 2017 – in pictures

      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Katie and her robot , Pepper. At the bristol Robotics Lab.

        How I got totally hooked on robotics

      • SoftBank Robot World, Tokyo, Japan - 21 Nov 2017<br>Mandatory Credit: Photo by Aflo/REX/Shutterstock (9236512l) J-deite Quarter a robot transforming between humanoid and vehicle on display SoftBank Robot World, Tokyo, Japan - 21 Nov 2017 SoftBank Robotics organized SoftBank Robot World 2017 to introduce AI (Artificial Intelligence) and IoT (the Internet of Things) companies developing the latest technology for robots, including applications its humanoid robot Pepper in various business fields. The robot expo runs until 22nd November

        Engineers needed to develop advances in transport tech

      • x-ray<br>xray background

        Engineering solutions for the future of modern medicine

      Postgrad study 2017

      • Applying for a postgrad course is surprising simple, often with flexible entry cycles throughout the year.

        Postgraduate study: how to ace the application

        The trickiest part about applying for a postgrad degree, is making the choice to study in the first place. So seize the moment and the rest is easy
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Sam Cooper 11A6935

        Study AI: 'I believe we could see the end of cancer in our lifetime'

      • Humanoid robot NAO Next Gen by Aldebaran Robotics.

        Master of machines: the rise of artificial intelligence calls for postgrad experts

      • Spider silk is stronger than steel on a per weight basis.

        Imitation games: the scientists copying nature to create life-changing materials

      • Martin McLean from the National Childrens Deaf Society

        'A PhD supervisor found out I was deaf, and cancelled the interview’

      • How to do a postgrad course for free in Europe

      • Will a master's give you the edge in your career?

      • Is enough being done to improve access for postgrad students with disabilities?

      • 'We saw an opportunity': postgrads who turned study into startup success

      • The postgraduate courses taking on the people smugglers

      • Miscarriage research: the bioengineers taking a fresh look at pregnancy

      • Postgrad course focus: banking, physician associate, management

      • Why study in ... Manchester?

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Engineer assembling electronics

        Why you need to get into the tech sector (and how to do it)

        There has never been a better time to enter this rapidly expanding sector – but should a degree apprenticeship or a traditional university course be your next step towards a tech career?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Science laboratory<br>Science Laboratory

        Breaking UK tech's gender divide

      • 14-15 BIT

        The 'internet of things': what it is and why business is taking it seriously

      • Sadia Maqsood photographed at her work place, Siemens where she manages a team working on renewable energy.

        ‘There's room for more women in UK engineering’

      • Hacker team working hackathon at laptop in dark office

        Calling all millennials: your cybersecurity industry needs you

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Nurses demonstrate against cuts to bursary

        The mental health workforce is 'reaching a cliff edge'. What can be done?

      • illustration abstract head in field

        How should the government overhaul mental health laws?

        With changes to mental health legislation due, we asked campaigners, sector workers and users what they wanted to see in a new act
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Close up of a man using mobile smart phone<br>F00KC2 Close up of a man using mobile smart phone

        Staying appy: mental health apps deliver mixed results

      • Close up of mature male artist working on canvas

        'It's time to recognise the contribution arts can make to health and wellbeing'

      • Prisons have recently seen record rises in suicides and self-harm.

        Locked up, locked out – inadequate stats on mental health are failing prisoners

      • Boys using gym equipment

        Why don't men seek help for eating disorders?

      • Dawn Foster

        After Grenfell, there is an opportunity to fix the UK's broken housing system

        Dawn Foster
        Many social housing tenants hope the Grenfell Tower disaster might bring real change and get their voices heard
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • At resident at London's Acorn house

        Supported housing: getting people back onto their own feet

      • Crisis Opens Its Doors To Help The Homeless During The Christmas Holidays<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 23:  Liz Gaskell, a school teacher and volunteer for the charity 'Crisis' runs an arts and crafts workshop in a Christmas homeless shelter set up by Crisis on December 23, 2009 in London, England. The temporary shelter in East London is one of nine centres run by Crisis for seven days over the Christmas period which will aim to assist 2000 homeless people.  (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images)

        Life on the job in social housing: 'it's always important to remember our social purpose'

      • Lack of construction workers after Brexit<br>File photo dated 25/08/16 of workers on a building site, as the British Property Federation has warned that Government efforts to address the housing crisis will falter if strict post-Brexit immigration controls result in fewer construction workers coming to the UK. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Monday May 29, 2017. The organisation’s chief executive Melanie Leech told the Press Association that access to talent following Britain’s divorce from the bloc is the most pressing concern for property firms. See PA story CITY BPF. Photo credit should read: Ben Birchall/PA Wire

        Only cross-party cooperation can fix our broken housing system

        Michael Lyons
      • Rear view of mid adult woman and baby daughter looking out of living room window

        The hidden homelessness crisis: 'what happens to those who are turned away?'

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Young woman looking up with autumn background<br>Young woman with short bangs and green sweater looking up with bright autumn background.

        How to apply to university through clearing

        This easy, step-by-step guide will take you through the clearing process, from searching for a course to the resulting university offer
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Multicoloured Dinking Straws

        Clearing: how to avoid the short straw

      • Group of students working in group and laughing

        Applying to university: how clearing became mainstream

      • Young female university student using wheelchair using computer at desk

        For students with additional needs, universities are there to help

      • More articles

      Fundraising

      • Niki Barton (right) Oxfam GB

        Pride, passion and priorities: the secret to a successful career in fundraising

        When choosing a charity to work for, fundraisers need to go with their heart. But is emotional connection enough to sustain a career?
      • two young girls running to raise money for cancer research charity

        Have charities finally regained public trust when it comes to fundraising?

      • A woman donates to charity using a contactless payment card.

        How apps and tech are transforming the way charities raise money

      • Martha Huntley from Hand in Hand

        Why I love my fundraising job: ‘You connect people with a cause’

      • Refugee Resource Women’s Project members participate in a wide range of training activities designed to empower, inform, increase confidence and build self-esteem.

        For better or worse, smaller charities have become more business-like

        Kate Hood
      • Fundraisers for charity, Help Refugees, an umbrella charity for more than 70 organisations around the world.

        'There's compassion fatigue': why refugee charities face a funding shortfall

      • Mother and teenaged son Summer urban portrait with phone, back lit by sunset.

        Get it right together – how parents can help pick the right university

      • Sheffield Hallam University student Norah Lovelock<br>Pictured is Sheffield Hallam University student Norah Lovelock(19) with her mum Lilian photographed today 25th May 2017 on campus.
photo by Fabio de Paola

        Leaving for university: ‘I did get homesick, but I didn’t linger on it’

        Leaving home is a wrench – for child and parent. But Norah Lovelock and her mum used it as a catalyst to branch out
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • ‘Pick a subject you love’

        Jeremy Irons
      • Bedfordshire Students on campus

        How to choose the uni – and the life – that suits you

      • Student with piggy bank<br>B66YRA Student with piggy bank

        How to make your university money last

      • Your relationship is changing – and conflict is par for the course

        Celia Dodd
      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Crowd of refugees

        Social work in Europe adapts to challenges of migration and exclusion

        European society is changing and, with it, the nature of social work. Can new procedures be set up to meet the needs of refugees and displaced communities?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Reading Initiative For Refugee Children Launch<br>BERLIN, GERMANY - DECEMBER 16: Immigrant mothers with their children look through games and books during the presentation of a new initiative to help children of refugees learn to read German at a shelter for migrants and refugees on December 16, 2015 in Berlin, Germany. The initiative, "Reading Start for Refugee Children," is being launched by the German Ministry of Education and Research. Germany is expected to receive over one million migrants seeking asylum in 2015 and is seeking a rapid integraiton of the newcomers into society and the job market, for which language instruction is a crucial component. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

        European countries seek common approach to child protection training

      • A boy playing on a garden swing wearing a mask

        Whether in state or family care, children must be the focus

        John Simmonds
      • Happy child and Grandparents using a tablet<br>Happy smiling little boy using a tablet with his Grandma and Grandpa

        Scotland sets out to speed up kinship care system

      • Expulsion of the Jungle migrant camp in Calais

        Should social workers be political activists?

      • Why is intercountry adoption declining?

      • Human trafficking: 'Victims are very reluctant to step forward'

      • Should human rights top the social work agenda?

      • Social workers have to tread a fine line when making decisions

        Ruth Stark
      • How to care for child refugees: lessons from Nordic countries

      • Care for older people is a family affair in the Nordic countries

      • Online child protection officer: 'I see traumatic images every day'

      • Portrait of a senior woman<br>GettyImages-526631015

        The battle against loneliness among older people

        With millions of older people living in isolation, what is being done to help?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • We're all here for you<br>A rear view shot of a caring mother consoling her adult son

        Male suicide: Gender should not be a death sentence

        Simon Gunning
      • Damian Hopley

        Damian Hopley on the end of his rugby career: 'It was like a bereavement'

      • Gellinudd Recovery Centre Gellinudd, run by the Welsh charity Hafal, is the UK's first in-patient mental health centre to be designed by service users and their carers, who make up Hafal's membership. group portrait 1

        Designed by patients: the mental health centre saving the NHS £300,000 a year

      • Blond-haired white teenage boy sitting on stairs concentrating at his mobile phone

        Social media and bullying: how to keep young people safe online

      • We need to open up about mental health in the workplace

        Sue Baker
      • Gardening, art, sport – 'prescriptions' for mental health that don't involve pills

      • Supporting LGBTI pupils: 'It's important a school is ready for anyone'

      • How schools are dealing with the crisis in children’s mental health

      • Growing up transgender: ‘I wish I could have come out younger’

      • Children need to be in the right mental state to learn effectively

        Tony Draper
      • Mental health nurses in short supply as NHS struggles to fill vacancies

      • Signs of hope in the prison mental health crisis

      • Theresa May speaks during Prime Minister's Questions

        How to tackle stress and make public service workers more resilient

      • Police officers lined up

        Who works where in the UK public sector: the statistics

        With the number of public sector staff falling, little wonder if the remaining workers face more stress and take more sick days
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Laura Jane Smith. Doctor. In front of some street art in Camden. She says that creativity such as art and photography helped her to lift her depression.

        Burnout, depression and anxiety – why the NHS has a problem with staff health

      • A business woman working late<br>BDYADF A business woman working late

        Too much tech: has the public sector lost the human touch?

        Cary Cooper
      • Over Million Public Sector Workers Hold Nationwide Strike<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 10: Public sector workers taking industrial action protest along Regent Street on July 10, 2014 in London, England. Over one million public sector workers are expected to take strike action today across the UK over disputes with the Government concerning pay, pensions and cuts. Professions of those taking industrial action include: teachers, council staff, firefighters and civil servants. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images)

        Why resilience training is so important in the public sector

        Hayley Lewis
      • Three firefighters tackling flames in fire simulation at training facility, front view<br>GettyImages-169263798

        Dealing with stress in the workplace: lessons from the public sector

      Postgraduate life

      • Engineering postgraduate student’ [in the Multiphase Flow Facility], Cranfield University

        Postgrad apprenticeships: ready for take-off

        As postgraduate degree apprenticeships gain in popularity, an option for leaders is next in the pipeline
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Marine Biology students, Plymouth University Lab practical session at the Marine Station.

        Clean energy postgrads: looking to the future

      • 3-Uni of york ProfessorTimAndrewsMRI-CreditSuzyHarrison

        Cognitive neuroscience postgrads: delving into the mysteries of the mind

      • Sao Francisco Xavier , Sao paulo , Brazil<br>A Paran Pine tree overlooking the landscape of Sao Francisco Xavier, Brazil; landscape; day time

        Seeding the future: how university incubators are helping postgrads' ideas bear fruit

      • Aafia Sarosh GEES MSc student, University of Hull

        Postgrad stress: how to deal with the university blues

      • Ball-watching through the ages: studying the history of sport

      • Sports science postgrad courses yield sweet returns

      • Post-Brexit postgrads: what's in store for higher education?

      • 'Half a million people were living in the mountains. The vulnerable were dying'

      • 'We don't just parachute in then bugger off' – how unis help refugees

      • Bond Dickinson Apprentices, Plymouth.

        Why apprenticeships are working

        Record numbers of young people are becoming apprentices and, with a new employer levy encouraging more firms to get involved, this trend looks set to continue
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Sameer Sohal, IT apprentice, GlaxoSmithKline.

        Apprenticeship: the qualification employers seek

      • Lois Medley, 17. Apprentice with WSP Parson Brinckerhoff, an engineering services firm. In the platform tunnels for the Liverpool St, Elizabeth line.

        Constructing a career with an engineering apprenticeship

      • Mercedes-Benz apprentices lent a hand in run up to the British Grand Prix t6r4199

        Why apprentices are the comeback kids

      • Young man on sofa using digital tablet.

        Find the right apprenticeship for you

      • Higher apprenticeships: the best of both worlds

      • How schools can teach pupils about apprenticeships

      • Why an accountancy apprenticeship adds up to degree-level career

      • Apprenticeship funding: a recipe for financial stability

      • Jeremy Irons in Bath Spa University chancellor robes

        Jeremy Irons: ‘Creativity is at the core of who we are’

        He’s played everyone from terrorists to Batman’s butler, but his new role, chancellor of Bath Spa University, brings its own challenges. Jeremy Irons explains the value he places upon the arts and how he aims to ‘disabuse students about the power of celebrity’
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Charles Dickens

        Dickens degrees: a tale of two cities

      • Woman standing in front of house

        New postgrad funding has made 'a dream come true'

      • Bridges and river

        Why study in ... Newcastle?

      • Businessman using cell phone in new office<br>E1C2YR Businessman using cell phone in new office

        Can you learn to be an entrepreneur?

      • Digital arts take centre stage

      • Online courses: your passport to a new career

      • Enter an academic competition to experience life beyond academia

      • What’s a postgrad worth to employers?

      • How an academic approach to art led to a dream job

      • What's life like for a postgrad student?

      • 'I feel genuinely sad' – European postgrads discuss Brexit

      • Studying abroad: get ready for an overseas adventure

      Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.
      • Three friends walking down the street together

        Do universities’ workforces reflect the diversity of their students?

      • Urban lesbian couple enjoy<br>Same sex young female real couple hanging out and embracing on colorful stairs in Istanbul

        University LGBT initiatives: there's still room for improvement

      • Young man in wheelchair working on laptop

        Universities wise up to the needs of staff with disabilities

      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Man and woman working in office

        Time to tap into technology

        Jobs are plentiful, salaries are high and it’s a growing area. What’s not to like about working in tech right now?
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Businessman looking at confusing chart of arrows in different directions, crisscrossing lines, and finance data. Image shot 2015. Exact date unknown.<br>FB30KP Businessman looking at confusing chart of arrows in different directions, crisscrossing lines, and finance data. Image shot 2015. Exact date unknown.

        Big data means big money

      • College students studying at computers

        Is technology still a man’s world?

      • Queen Mary Building, University of London School of Maths

        Study with a salary

      • Pokemon on phone screen

        All the virtual world’s a gamer's stage

      Housing matters

      • Couple with two children walk down street. Still from Cathy Come Home

        The housing crisis has created rising levels of homelessness

        Fifty years after Cathy Come Home, a new generation wrestles with life on the breadline. Action is needed as much today as in the 1960s
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Children play in housing estate

        Tackling antisocial behaviour at its root

      • A young disabled women hangs out her washing

        Social housing for those with extra needs is still under threat, say providers

      • New Homes Under Construction In South London<br>A construction worker stands by scaffolding at the Oval Quarter, a shared ownership, private and social residential housing complex developed by Higgins Group Plc in partnership with Nottinghill Housing and Pinnacle Regeneration Group, in London, U.K., on Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. U.K. house prices rose 0.8 percent in July, from 0.3 percent the previous month, Nationwide Building Society said. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

        Could devolution be a new dawn for local housing?

      • Men and women in world war two uniforms with placards

        Social housing is under fire from government policy as never before

      • Housing associations cast net widely to find resident-focused recruits

      • Private firms will never build enough homes: time to invest in social housing

      • Self-build homes: the families using DIY to beat the housing crisis

      Freshers' week

      • Hand holding ticket for fancy dress party

        Freshers' week: a blank canvas

        Whether you want to dress up and party or stay sober and swat up for the coming year, there’s something for everyone at freshers’ week
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Female student in techy lab

        My freshers' week story: 'We were all lost together'

      • Plate of spaghetti bolognese

        The ten best things about freshers' week

      • Bearded man standing behind beer tap in bar

        Freshers' finances: it's time to learn about money

      • Man on stage

        Freshers' week entertainment: Radio 1 on tour

      • University: an introduction to political activism

      • Stay healthy at university

      • Freshers' week faux-pas

      • 20 essentials for university life

      Clearing 2016

      • Students reads their A-level results at Westminster Kingsway College, King’s Cross Centre, London

        Time for Clearing, time to reassess your options

        Did you fall short of the grades needed for your chosen universities? Clearing can find you a new dream place
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Portrait of young man talking on vintage telephone<br>Serious young funny man talking on the pink telephone, isolated on blue wall background

        Find a course through Clearing – and say the right things on the phone

      • Student thinking in classroom

        Clearing questions tutors do and don't want to hear

      • Man holding smartphone

        Social media: the best-kept Clearing secret

      • Students party at Aberystwyth University Students’ Union.

        Freshers’ week: your university adventure starts here

      • University societies - do you wanna be in my gang?

      • More than one way to fill a gap year

      • Studying tips for freshers

      • Student style – wearing it their way

      • Occupational therapist helping a person with learning disabilities in a sports leisure centre

        Driving change: Occupational therapists forge new career paths

        There are an increasing number of job opportunities for occupational therapists, in driving centres, sports facilities and schools for children with specials needs
      • Download the supplement (PDF)

      • Occupational therapist with woman patient in hospital bed

        Quiet revolution puts occupational therapists at the forefront of healthcare

      • Students at Brunel University

        What will scrapping bursaries mean for occupational therapy students?

      • Female occupational therapist talking and listening to elderly man in a wheelchair; making an assessment on progress

        How occupational therapists help keep older people out of hospital

      • Pentonville Prison, London UK. Inmate nurse on wing

        Improving people’s health can prevent offending

        Michael Matheson
      • Budget cuts leave occupational therapy posts unfilled as referrals rise

      • How occupational therapists are turning lives around in Northern Ireland

      • Occupational therapists' role: 'We save money and improve quality of life'

      • The day an occupational therapist changed my life

      2016

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