In our latest instalment of the Day in the Life series, we sat down with Edmen Youth Support Worker, Monica. She chats to us about her journey changing career paths as a former accountant turned Care Practitioner, what her biggest learnings have been since joining the youth service industry and gives a glimpse into what a typical day at work looks like.
I started with Edmen about 4 months ago. I work as a Care Practitioner / Residential Youth Worker with Edmen’s community service partner, Infinity Community Solutions in Queensland.
When I joined Edmen, I was placed with 3 young brothers aged 9, 11 and 12 just 7 minutes away from where I live. I’ve been working in the same house since I started. So far, I’ve been really enjoying the work, more than I thought I would.
I worked as an accountant for 15 years before deciding to switch careers entirely. I am currently studying a diploma in Community Services and saw a job ad for a Youth Support Worker role with Edmen so I applied, and here I am.
A lot of my friends questioned my decision at the start, but honestly, while it’s been challenging, it’s taught me a lot and I have no regrets - I am happy. I originally come from Papua New Guinea and have spent lots of time doing volunteer work in places like the Solomon Islands. Growing up, my parents had large influence on what I went on to study but over time I realised accounting wasn’t the path for me.
If it’s a sleepover shift, I start work 8am. I get the kids ready for school – some days this is easy and on other days getting them into the car is a real challenge. After I drop them off at school, I’ll clean up the house, meal prep for the afternoon and do the daily shores. At around 3pm, I’ll pick them up from school, we’ll do afternoon activities and then have dinner. Then it’s time for showers, bedtime stories and then the biggest challenge of the day – getting them to go to sleep. They can go from 0 to 10 very quickly!
When I started with Edmen and Infinity four months ago, the boys I support couldn’t read. Everyone I work with told me this was challenge as it made communicating with them quite hard at times. I started sounding words to them and now they can read my name, as well as the four care practitioners’ names I work with. Teaching them basic skills in life, for example, washing up after dinner, saving their pocket money and basic life skills is really rewarding.
Dealing with behavioural issues. As Care Practitioners, we always have to remember that these kids have come from trauma backgrounds and often not very good places. There’s a lot of therapeutic work that must be done with these kids.
For me personally, I think you need the passion and heart to do the job well. Kids are very sensitive, and they connect on deeper levels. They can feel whether you are genuinely there to help them. That’s the biggest thing I’ve learnt stepping into this new career.
First off, I’m so grateful Edmen gave me the opportunity having not had any prior paid experience as a Youth Worker. The recruitment process took around 6 weeks from my first phone interview through to starting the work at Infinity’s residential house. The recruiter, Cassie, kept me updated throughout the process so I was never at one point left in the lurch.
Edmen’s Service Coordinators I work with, Emma and Brendan, have also been so supportive at every step of the way.
Yes! Patience. I have 3 kids myself but working in a support capacity is totally different. That was a huge eye opener for me. I walked into the job thinking I’ve got this – my kids are all a similar age to the boys I support. But no, it wasn’t quite that easy and being a parent and youth worker are two totally roles and experiences.
I see myself staying in the community service sector and growing my career from here. The diploma I am studying is quite broad, so next up I plan on completing a certificate to further specialise in working with children and youth, like family intervention.