Babcock will offer the STEM Returners programme at their sites in Plymouth, Bristol and Rosyth following a successful programme in 2021. Roles include Mechanical Design Engineer, Naval Architect and Structural Engineer, among others.
STEM Returners, based in Hampshire, will source candidates for the programme, which aims to return or transfer experienced engineers back into industry following a career break. The fully paid placements act as a ‘returnship’, allowing candidates to be re-integrated into an inclusive environment upon their return to STEM.
Whilst the scheme helps solve the problem of sourcing talent in sectors that need it, it also has the added benefit of increasing diversity in a host organisation. STEM Returners’ population of experienced professionals who are attempting to return to work are 51% female and 38% from black and minority ethnic groups, compared to 10% female and 6% BME working in the STEM industry.
Natalie Desty, Director of STEM Returners said: “We are very proud to be continuing our work with Babcock to return highly skilled people back into the industry they love. Only by partnering with industry leaders like Babcock, will we make vital changes in STEM recruitment practices, to help those who are finding it challenging to return to the sector and improve diversity and inclusion.”
Babcock’s Group Head of Early Careers, Debbie Joce, said: “After a successful partnership in 2021 with STEM Returners, we are delighted to be part of the programme again going into 2022. Supporting this initiative has provided us with an opportunity to introduce even more talent and diversity into our organisation whilst also allowing us to fill skills gaps by placing skilled professionals back into roles most suited to them.”
There is a well-known skills shortage in the UK engineering industry, but despite a clear need for people, there is a group of talented and educated professionals who are willing and able to take on these roles who are being overlooked and finding it challenging to return to their desired profession.
In the STEM Returners’ annual survey – The STEM Returners Index – 61% of STEM professionals on a career break say they are finding the process of attempting to return to work either difficult or very difficult, and 36% of returners have felt bias in the recruitment process has been a barrier to them personally returning to their career.
The STEM Returners’ programme aims to eliminate these barriers, by giving candidates real work experience and mentoring during their placement and helping them to seamlessly adjust to life back in work.
Successful candidates may be offered full-time positions at Babcock upon the completion of their 12-week placement. Since STEM Returners launched in 2017, more than 200 STEM Returner candidates has joined programmes across the UK.
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