National Youth Work Outcomes & Skills Framework

YouthLink Scotland has worked hand-in-hand with the youth work sector to develop a clear, impactful model to allow youth workers to develop and track key skills with the young people they work with.

Youth worker and two young boys examine the youth work outcomes and skills framework on a whiteboard

Over a number of years, the youth work sector has worked collaboratively to clearly articulate the contribution of youth work in Scotland.  The youth work outcomes and the youth work skills framework proved to be valuable tools in planning and evaluating the work we do, and most importantly in providing a structure for reflective learning conversations with young people on their youth work journey.  

During 2022, YouthLink Scotland worked with the youth work sector to integrate these established tools into a single framework, aiming to make it more straightforward for youth workers to make clear connections between outcomes and skills – and for young people to identify and review meaningful learning goals.

Scotland's National Youth Work Outcomes & Skills Framework!

An Overview of the Youth Work Outcomes and Skills Framework

The Youth Work Outcomes and Skills Framework can be used in a range of youth work contexts and practices. Importantly, it does not set out to record every aspect of the change that youth work can make, but to describe the most significant changes that young people commonly describe as a result of their involvement in youth work. 

You can view and download a full version of the Outcome and Skills here. A simple text version is available here.

The example below shows how outcomes, skills and indicators connect: 

Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 1 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people build their health and wellbeing.'

Things To Bear In Mind

  1. It’s important that the outcomes are viewed together, not in isolation.  It’s difficult, for example, to imagine a youth work programme that ‘builds young people’s health and wellbeing’ and does not simultaneously grow their confidence to ‘develop and manage relationships’ that matter to them.    
  2. Skills development is a continuous work in progress – for all of us, and usually over a whole lifetime!  A young person who feels confident to speak out in a small group with people they know will, over time, become a young person who feels confident to present their ideas in large groups and to people they have never met before.  So, the indicators you choose to measure progress in each context should reflect the age and stage of the young people you are working with – and will change as young people grow.  
  3. Indicators are a tool to help you measure progress.  Don’t be tempted to try to measure everything.  As a rule of thumb, you can’t expect to effectively measure more than 10-12 indicators in any given programme.  So, make sure the indicators you choose are both realistic and relevant.   
  4. The new integrated framework builds on years of thoughtful consultation with youth practitioners, young people and sector partners and stakeholders.  But it does not – and cannot – describe everything that youth work does.  At best, it is an approximation, a carefully considered simplification that describes some of the important ways that young people develop and change as they participate in youth work.  

National Youth Work Outcomes

The seven youth work outcomes describe the key overarching impacts of youth work:

Outcome 1: Young people build their health and wellbeing 

Outcome 2: Young people develop and manage relationships effectively 

Outcome 3: Young people create and apply their learning and describe their skills and achievements 

Outcome 4: Young people participate safely and effectively in groups and teams 

Outcome 5: Young people consider risk, make reasoned decisions and take control 

Outcome 6: Young people grow as active citizens, expressing their voice and enabling change 

Outcome 7: Young people broaden their perspectives through new experiences and thinking 

Youth Work Skills and Associated Indicators

The eleven youth work skills describe key building blocks that enable young people to make progress towards these outcomes.  The indicators associated with the development of these skills describe observable behaviours that help us set goals and measure progress with young people.

Find out more about youth work skills

We’ve included 11 key skills that youth work develops in partnership with young people, such as confidence, resilience, leadership and problem solving. Explore each of the skills in more detail on our Youth Work Skills page.

Young boy with braces and red hair, wearing a green hoodie smiling at the camera

Resources and Advice for Using the Framework

The examples below demonstrate how outcomes, skills and associated indicators can be integrated to support evaluation, but they are not intended to be prescriptive. Youth workers will adapt and edit indicators to reflect context, programme objectives and individual needs. Many programmes may focus on just one or two youth work outcomes. And when it comes to the ‘right’ skills and indicators to focus on, youth workers, youth work partners and young people should work together to agree which of these it would be most beneficial to work on and measure progress against.

Over time, we’ll be providing more resources and case examples to support local conversations about how best to use the framework in your local context.

Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 1 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people build their health and wellbeing.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 2 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people develop and manage relationships effectively.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 3 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people create and apply their learning and describe their skills and achivements.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 4 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people participate safely and effectively in groups and teams.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 5 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people consider risk, make reasoned decisions and take control.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 6 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people grow as active citizens, expressing their voice and enabling change.'
Table showing the skills and indicators connected to Outcome 7 of the Youth Skills Framework - 'Young people broaden their perspective through new experiences and thinking.'