When DS did his work experience back in the late 1980s, work experience opportunities came from a variety of sources, depending on the career the child concerned was interested in.
In some cases it was local companies, sometimes, particularly where pupils wanted to go into the professions parents might have solicitors, or vets, or painters & decorators or plumbers among their family and friends and they would provide the child with work experience..
DS wanted to be an archaeologist. He developed his interest very young and had drawn me into archaeology as an interest and I asked around among the professional archaeologists I knew and one of them was able to provide a weeks work experience.
As far as I know work experience has always come from a range of sources, direct contact, networking and formal invitations from company to school.
Simply helping a child get work experience is unlikely to undermine a child's independence or self-reliance. I think people can get too worked up over trivial help that most parents offer as they can. My 'fixing' his work experience didn't stop him organising his own Gap Year employment a year later, nor making his way in a very oversubscibed profession once he graduated.
Thinking of selling due to heat



