As part of our partnership with the Pro Bono Community programme, Law students from across our LLB programmes have now been placed with a range of legal advice centres, citizens’ advice bureaus, charities and NGOs, including: Age UK Islington, Age UK Lambeth, Citizens Advice Harrow, Citizens Advice Havering, Citizens Advice Kensington and Chelsea, Coram Children’s Legal Centre, Island Advice Centre (Tower Hamlets) and South East London Mind.
Activities undertaken vary but can include for example tasks such as: triaging new clients, signposting or referring clients, providing information and advice on next steps, form filling, assessing entitlements, liaising with third parties on behalf of clients, supporting supervisors with activities such legal research, analysis and preparing documents and bundles for Tribunal hearings.
The Pro Bono programme gives our students the opportunity to apply to work as a volunteer in social welfare agencies, legal advice centres and charities across London, putting theory into practice and gaining invaluable experience of advising clients, mainly around welfare law issues.
It involves volunteering for one day a week, for six months , and we give our students space to do that by freeing at least one day per week in their timetable, for volunteering and part time work as well as engaging with study trips and other ‘beyond the classroom’ activities.
You can find examples here of placements that students have done in the past in the context of this programme: https://lnkd.in/gTy5RVD
Pro Bono Community also provide the training that prepares our students for these placements.
The training was held across two Saturdays earlier this term. More than 30 students attended, half of them moving on to take the placement, while the other half used the training as an opportunity to obtain skills and relevant certification of attendance from Pro Bono and Goldsmiths.
The training programme provided volunteers with an overview of welfare benefits law, and included group work, exercises and case studies. It placed emphasis on interpersonal and practical skills as well as recent social welfare reforms, before focussing on a range of welfare benefits law topics serving to contextualise the work that students will undertake as volunteers.
The Pro Bono initiative at Goldsmiths Law offers an example of the dynamic career skills opportunities that our students are given during their studies. We trust these are then reflected, and explain, our outstanding graduate outcome survey results as well as our sector leading NSS results (on learning opportunities and the student experience).