Volunteering is a great way to gain experience and to improve your confidence and self-esteem. It is something you can do in your spare time but you can also volunteer full-time after leaving school, provided you are also undertaking some part-time study or training. Below you will find some useful organisations that can help you find volunteering opportunities.
So, why volunteer? You might choose to volunteer so that you can:
have fun and meet new people
try new things
follow your interests and test your career ideas
learn new skills
build up your self-confidence and self-esteem
gain experience to put on your CV
get involved in your community and make a difference!
The minimum age for employment is 13 years of age.
These are some examples of the types of work children of school age can be employed to do:
Work in shops including on tills
Shelf stacking
Delivering newspapers, journals and leaflets
Office work
Serving at a table in a café or restaurant
Car washing by hand
Light agricultural/horticultural work
Working in a riding stable
Shampooing/sweeping up in a hairdressers
Working in hotels
Jobs in entertainment
These are some examples of work children of school age cannot be employed to do:
Work in any commercial kitchen such as a café, pub, hotel, restaurant or fish and chip shop
Serve alcoholic drinks in pubs, clubs or restaurants
Work in cinemas, discos, nightclubs or theatres
Work in a factory or industrial undertaking
Work in a fairground, amusement park or where gambling takes place
Work in milk delivery or butchers shops
Telephone sales
Serve petrol/fuel/oil, or handle any dangerous biological or chemical substances
Collect money, selling or canvassing door to door or in street trading
Lift heavy objects
No child may start work before 7.00 am or finish later than 7.00 pm. When aged between 13 years and their school leaving date a child may work:
On school days:
One hour before school and up to two hours after school. They must not work more than a total of two hours on any school day.
All Sunday employment is restricted to a maximum of two hours
Saturdays and school holidays:
Children aged 13 or 14 years old can work for a total of five hours daily to a maximum of 25 hours weekly
Children aged 15 years and over can work for a total of eight hours daily to a maximum of 35 hours weekly
A child who works for four hours in any one session must have a break of one hour.
Taken from https://www.norfolk.gov.uk/children-and-families/children-in-employment-and-entertainment