Internships and supported internships
An internship is another name for a work placement or work experience with an employer.
Some interns are employed by a company and receive regular pay; other interns are volunteers gaining valuable work experience as a stepping stone to the job they want.
If you are doing an internship for less than one year through a further education college, you are not entitled to the National Minimum Wage.
If you are doing your internship through a charity, voluntary organisation, fund-raising body or statutory body as a volunteer, you will not be paid except for limited benefits, for example travel or lunch expenses.
Supported Internships
If you are 16-24-years-old, have an education, health and care (EHC) plan and want to work, a Supported Internship will provide you with the extra support you need to achieve your goal.
A Supported Internship is a one-year study programme at college that will help you to get the skills and experience you need to get a job
On a Supported Internship, you will spend at least six months in an unpaid work placement with an employer. You will also have a personal study programme. This gives you the chance to gain useful qualifications, which could include English and maths.
A Supported Internship is very similar to a traineeship or apprenticeship; meaning you will be ready to work when you've completed the programme. The main difference is that you will be offered a higher level of support than a trainee or apprentice, and this will include work place support through a job coach.
There are no entry or completion requirements for Supported Internships. The aim is simply to prepare you for paid employment by:
- Supporting you to develop the skills valued by employers
- Enabling you to show what you can do in the workplace
- Developing your confidence in your own ability to perform successfully at work
The ideal outcome is for you to be offered a paid job from your host employer or another employer.
Other outcomes you may also achieve are:
- Work experience to add to your CV
- Changing the perception of employers about people with learning difficulties and/or disabilities
- Changing the perception of your family/friends by showing that you can work
- Improving your English and maths skills to prepare you for work and independent living
- Becoming an independent traveller
Our colleges in Norfolk all offer the Supported Internship study programme where you'll have the support of a Job Coach and be placed with one of the college's partner employers. This could be a large organisation, like a hospital, or a smaller employer. Your Job Coach will ask where you want to work.
To find out more contact your local college and ask about their Supported Internship programme:
- City College, Norwich
- College of West Anglia, King's Lynn
- East Coast College, Great Yarmouth
- Ixion Holdings, Norwich and King's Lynn
- The Wherry School, Norwich - Please note that applicants must have a diagnosis of Autism and an EHCP and will be considered by the LA for funding on a case by case basis. All offers are conditional until the application & assessment processes are completed. Following the application deadline the school and the Local Authority will meet to review individual applications. An assessment day with AVIVA then takes place, after which successful candidates will be notified of their placement.
Help You Choose has information about the local colleges who offer Supported Internship programmes in Norfolk
