Child and Youth Worker Program Offers Options
Having choices when you finish a college program is crucial to your
success. With Centennial College’s Child and Youth Worker program,
students can rest assured that they will be supported even after their
diploma is handed to them. That’s because not only does the program
equip students with an Ontario College Advanced Diploma but also engages
them in pre-graduation experiences to ensure their resume stands out
among the slew of Child and Youth Worker professionals. Additionally,
those who complete the Child and Youth Worker program may apply to
Ryerson University’s Child and Youth Care direct-entry degree program or
receive credit towards their university degree in related disciplines.
Child and Youth Worker graduates with a C+ average may also apply to
Vancouver Island University for direct entry into the third year of the
Child & Youth Work degree program. A child protection specialization
is also available for a limited number of students. Lastly, students
may apply for membership in the Ontario Association of Child & Youth
Counsellors (OACYC).
In order to get to this point, students spend three years studying
curriculum that is reviewed and revised annually to ensure that courses
and assignments are based on current research and best practices.
Currently, the Child and Youth Worker program emphasizes principles,
working with traumatized children and youth philosophies and
characteristics of relational child and youth work practice such as
co-creating relationships, working developmentally and understanding
professional boundaries, as well as developmental issues in childhood
and adolescence, professional recording, principles of psychology, child
and adolescent mental health, advocacy and law in children’s mental
health, and more.
To obtain hands-on experience prior to graduation, Child and Youth
Worker students complete assignments in specially designed
communications lab that are used to facilitate interactive learning
activities, counselling simulations and small group observation and
feedback. Supplemental training is also provided in Understanding &
Managing Aggressive Behaviour.
Meanwhile, off-campus aspects of the Child and Youth Worker program that
allow students to apply what they have learned include three field
placements that range between two and four days per week. Students must
have a vulnerable sector criminal check prior to their field placements.
Students must also possess a standard first aid and heart saver AED (C)
certification. Lastly for placement, a medical certificate of health is
necessary to ensure freedom of communicable disease. Certain criminal
convictions will disallow placement in these agencies and program
completion may not be possible.
Applicants to this Child and Youth Worker program must have completed
minimum an Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD) or equivalent or are
19 years of age or older; and have a credit in the compulsory English
12C or U or skills assessment or equivalent. It is worth noting that
admission to Child and Youth Worker is “highly competitive” and program
spots fills quickly. To be considered, applicants should apply prior to
the Ontario Colleges equal consideration date of February 1 and submit
transcripts or complete a skills assessment as early as possible.
Child and Youth Worker
professionals are in high demand by agencies serving troubled youth and
their families as well as residential and day treatment programs,
hospitals, young offender programs, crisis centres, community-based
programs and shelters. Specific organizations hiring Centennial College
Child and Youth Worker grads include: Aisling Discoveries Child and
Family Services, Children's Aid Society of Toronto, East Metro Youth
Services, Ontario Shores Mental Health Sciences, York Region District
School Board and more.