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Youth offending team officer

  • Hours

    37 per week

  • Starting salary

    £20,000 + per year

If you are keen to help young people have a better future, this job could be perfect for you. Youth offending team officers aim to prevent young people from offending and reoffending. They work with young offenders and with their families and victims.

Many youth offending services will ask for qualifications in social work or probation. If you don't have qualifications but you have plenty of relevant experience as a volunteer, you may be able to start as a support worker.

Being a youth offending team officer can sometimes be challenging. You will need to stay calm under pressure. You also need to be able to handle difficult behaviour.



The work

As a youth offending team officer, you would work for a local authority's Youth Offending Team or Service (YOT or YOS). These teams are made up of various services to support young offenders, protect the public from high-risk offenders, and deal with problems that can lead to youth crime.

Your duties could include some or all of the following:

  • carrying out risk assessments and planning how to manage future risk
  • preparing reports for the courts before sentencing, based on risk assessments
  • coming up with action plans to support young offenders and prevent them from reoffending
  • referring young offenders to agencies such as housing, or drug and alcohol misuse services to support their welfare needs
  • agreeing ways of resolving some offences to benefit the victim or the community
  • supervising young offenders on court orders and community sentences, and after their release from secure institutions
  • helping young offenders back into education, or find work or training, and encouraging them to take part in constructive activities
  • working with young offenders to help them see how their behaviour and attitudes affect other people, so that they will take responsibility for their actions
  • visiting young people in secure institutions, and making risk assessments and plans for after their release
  • working closely with staff from organisations such as the police, social services, probation, health services and education
  • managing the amount of cases that you have, recording case notes and writing reports.

As an experienced and qualified YOT officer, most of your work is likely to be with high risk and vulnerable young people. You might also move into specialised work, such as running prevention schemes aimed at young people who are most likely to offend or behave anti-socially.


Hours

In a full-time job you would work 37 hours a week, which may include some evening or weekend work.

You would be based at an office but would also work at other places in your local area, including police stations, courts, prisons and detention centres, youth clubs and clients' homes.


Income

Full-time salaries are between £20,000 and £29,000 a year.

Youth offending team officers on temporary contracts usually earn between £15 and £22 an hour.

Figures are intended as a guideline only.


Entry requirements

You could join a youth offending team (YOT) with qualifications and experience in a relevant background, like social work, youth work or probation. You should also have experience of doing paid or voluntary work with young people, and it would help you to have knowledge of the justice system.

Many youth offending services will ask for qualifications in social work or probation. However, if you don't have qualifications but you have plenty of relevant experience as a volunteer, you may be able to start as a YOT support worker. In many youth offending services, YOT support workers work with low and medium risk offenders, and those with social work qualifications and experience work with higher risk offenders.

Opportunities for voluntary work with young people in the youth justice system could include working as an Appropriate Adult, mentoring, helping with literacy skills or becoming a magistrate. (Appropriate Adult is a role created to protect the rights and welfare of young people and vulnerable adults in police custody). This experience could then lead to paid work, often starting as a part-time YOT worker.

See the Youth Justice Board website for more information about the types of voluntary work that may be available, and for a list of local youth offending teams. You could contact your local youth offending team or check the Do-it website to find out about local volunteering opportunities.


Training and development

You may get the chance to work towards one or more industry-recognised qualifications as part of the Youth Justice National Qualifications Framework.

Qualifications include:

  • a series of short online courses at an introductory level
  • Professional Certificate in Effective Practice (Youth Justice) – an Open University course for both new and experienced youth justice workers
  • Foundation Degree in Youth Justice – an Open University course for those working and volunteering in youth justice.

See the Youth Justice Board website for more information on the Youth Justice National Qualifications Framework.

You may also get relevant training and development throughout your career, such as short courses in particular aspects of youth offending.


Skills and knowledge

To become a youth offending team officer, you will need to have:

  • a genuine interest in helping people
  • patience, empathy and a non-judgmental attitude
  • excellent communication and 'people' skills
  • a flexible and adaptable approach
  • the ability to stay calm under pressure and handle challenging behaviour
  • good report-writing skills
  • awareness of confidentiality
  • the ability to work as part of a team and also use your own initiative
  • good organisational skills
  • the ability to manage your time effectively and prioritise tasks
  • an interest in social issues and the criminal justice system
  • knowledge of relevant criminal justice and childcare legislation
  • an ability to work with difficult or disadvantaged young people and families.

More information

Skills for Justice (Opens new window)
Centre Court
Atlas Way
Sheffield
S4 7QQ
www.skillsforjustice.com

Youth Justice Board for England and Wales (Opens new window)
1 Drummond Gate
London
SW1V 2QZ
Tel: 020 3372 8000
www.yjb.gov.uk


Opportunities

Most opportunities are with local authority Youth Offending Teams. You could also find temporary contracts through employment agencies that specialise in community justice work.

Vacancies are advertised in the local and national press, on local authority websites and jobs bulletins, and by specialist employment agencies.

With experience, you could progress to team leader or team manager roles. Another option is to do further training and move into social work or educational welfare.

You may find the following websites useful for vacancies and general reading (links open in new window):

Job profiles are based on the latest information supplied to us by industry bodies, such as Sector Skills Councils. Please be aware that with the introduction of the Qualifications and Credit Framework (Opens in a new window) there has been, and will continue to be, changes to vocational qualifications. For more information, please check with industry bodies directly.

We do not accept responsibility for the content of external sites.


Related industry information

Industry summary

Community justice is part of the justice sector, which is represented by Skills for Justice Sector Skills Council. It includes: police and law enforcement; prosecution service; courts and tribunals; forensic science; custodial care; plus fire and rescue services. The sector works to create and maintain a safe, just and stable society. Its purpose is to reduce crime and re-offending, promote confidence in the criminal justice system, protect people and contribute to the reduction and fear of crime, and support the administration of justice. The sector employs around 600,000 employees in the UK across a range of organisations operating with different remits.

The community justice sector can be divided into the following five main areas of activity or career pathways:

  • Working with offending behaviour – agencies that work with offending behaviour to protect the public, operate and enforce court orders and prison licences and rehabilitate offenders to lead law abiding and constructive lives.
  • Working with victims, survivors and witnesses – mainly third sector organisations that provide support to the victims, survivors and witnesses of crime in general (such as Victim Support), as well as organisations that specialise in a particular area of crime, such as domestic violence or rape (for example Rape Crisis UK).
  • Community safety – individuals and organisations that aim to reduce offending behaviour and the harms experienced by individuals and communities because of crime and disorder. They also seek to improve people’s quality of life through efforts to change the wider physical and social environment. To achieve this, Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnerships (CRDPs) have been established in England, and Community Safety Partnerships (CSPs) have been established in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
  • Substance misuse – community-based substance misuse organisations (whether statutory or third sector) work to improve availability, capability and effectiveness of advice, support and treatment for drug misuse. Drug action teams (DATs) (150 in England) and Substance Misuse Action Teams (SMATs) (22 in Wales) are responsible for ensuring that the national drugs strategy is delivered at a local level.
  • Youth justice – work with young people at risk to help them progress towards employment, further training or education opportunities. In England and Wales, the Youth Justice system comprises Youth Offending Teams (YOTs).

Key facts:

  • There are 73,000 people working in community justice, of which:
    • 33,025 work with offending behaviour
    • 11,500 work with victims, survivors and witnesses
    • an estimated 3,350 work in community safety
    • approximately 5,000 work in substance misuse organisations
    • 10,000 staff (and as many volunteers) work in youth justice (figure for England and Wales only)
  • 70% of the workforce is employed in the public sector.
  • High numbers of volunteers are required to work with victims, survivors and witnesses, and with the Youth Offending Teams.
  • Women across the justice sector as a whole tend to be concentrated in support roles.

Jobs in the industry range from:

  • Working with Offending Behaviour – Probation Services Officer, Trainee Probation Officer, Probation Officer, Supervisor, Psychologist, Senior Practitioner, Treatment Manager, Operational Support Staff, Project Workers
  • Working with Victims, Survivors and Witnesses – Managers, Victim Care Officers, Independent Domestic Violence Advocate, Senior practitioners, Counsellor/Therapist, Helpline workers, Volunteers
  • Community Safety – Community Safety Managers, Community Safety Officers, Neighbourhood Wardens/Community Wardens, Community Safety Team Leader
  • Substance Misuse – DAT/SMAT Co-ordinator, Project worker, Substance Misuse Worker, Practice nurse, Administrative worker
  • Youth Justice – Youth Workers, YOT Manager, Senior Practitioner, Practitioner, Administrative Assistants, Volunteers

National and regional data

In the East Midlands, there are 9 Drug Actions Teams, 5 Probation establishments and 8 Youth Offending Teams.

In the East of England, there are 10 Drug Actions Teams, 6 Probation establishments and 10 Youth Offending Teams.

In London, there are 33 Drug Actions Teams, 1 Probation establishment and 32 Youth Offending Teams.

In the North East, there are 12 Drug Actions Teams, 4 Probation establishments and 11 Youth Offending Teams.

In the North West, there are 22 Drug Actions Teams, 5 Probation establishments and 15 Youth Offending Teams.

In the South East, there are 19 Drug Actions Teams, 5 Probation establishments and 15 Youth Offending Teams.

In the South West, there are 15 Drug Actions Teams, 5 Probation establishments and 14 Youth Offending Teams.

In the West Midlands, there are 14 Drug Actions Teams, 4 Probation establishments and 12 Youth Offending Teams.

In Yorkshire and Humberside, there are 15 Drug Actions Teams, 3 Probation establishments and 15 Youth Offending Teams.

In Northern Ireland, the community justice workforce comprises:

  • 1,019 people working in offending behaviour
  • approximately 80 people working in community safety
  • 423 people delivering youth justice services
  • an unknown number working with victims, survivors and witnesses, and in substance misuse

Some key skill shortages in the Northern Ireland workforce include: risk assessment and management; challenges of working in partnership and in competition; working with high risk offenders; team leading in youth justice; multi-agency working with reference to young people; and competitive bidding.

In Scotland, the community justice workforce comprises:

  • 2,677 people working in offending behaviour
  • approximately 78 people working in community safety
  • 822 people delivering youth justice services
  • an unknown number working with victims, survivors and witnesses, and in substance misuse

Some key skill shortages in the Scottish workforce include: keeping up with policy and legislative change; partnership working skills; financial management, such as securing funding; and ICT skills.

In Wales, the community justice workforce comprises:

  • 1,450 people working in offending behaviour
  • approximately 66 people working in community safety
  • 423 people
  • an unknown number working with victims, survivors and witnesses, in substance misuse and delivering youth justice services

Some key skill shortages in the Northern Ireland workforce include: risk assessment and management; challenges of working in partnership and in competition; working with high risk offenders; team leading in youth justice; multi-agency working with reference to young people; and competitive bidding.


Career paths


Further sources


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