Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to share the Students Commission of Canada’s perspectives on youth employment in Canada.
My name is Sharif Mahdy and I am privileged to serve as the chief executive officer of this organization.
The Students Commission of Canada is a national Canadian charity, founded in 1991, with an expertise in youth engagement in all facets of Canadian life, including employment and skills development. We partner with youth. We listen to youth. We work with them and their expertise to address the challenges they face and engage with them, together, to contribute to Canadian society. Our mission includes supporting other organizations, businesses, governments and collaborations to do the same.
Four pillars guide our work: respect, listen, understand and communicate. Our capacity to support, advise and consult with others is generated in part from the aggregated knowledge we synthesize, but its immediate and main genesis has always been from our own direct work with youth.
In our beginning, everyone at the Students Commission was a volunteer—both youth and adults. Youth became employees as soon as we were able to move from an all-volunteer model to one with paid staff. Paid youth staff and youth as co-op placements, for credits and/or paid, have been with us since the early years.
Today, I will share what we are hearing from youth. Specifically, I'll share some of the solutions and innovations that they’ve suggested to address and tackle our current youth employment challenges. This includes pulling and sharing results from our engagements and programs on youth employment, including sharing some direct voices of young people themselves.
What we are hearing very loudly and clearly is that this isn’t the same workplace or workforce that young people imagined 10 years ago. The economy is shifting, career paths are non-linear and success today is as much about connection, adaptability and identity as it is about credentials.
Youth are anxious about the present and the future that they face. What we have learned from thousands of youth and the organizations, schools and employers who serve them is that it takes a whole-of-society approach to address youth employment, so that they can handle the pressures of today's world, particularly after the gaps in pre-employment preparation that were generated during and post-COVID—an era of so much virtual work and virtual education.
We have a stream of programs focused on youth skills development. We work in the pre-employment skill development space. We are in the process of co-creating, implementing and scaling frameworks that integrate pre-employment soft and hard skill development through extracurricular opportunities and connections to service in community, with formal education and credit accumulation, and stronger ties to employers with practical experiences of work-placed learning and purposeful employment. Again, it's a whole-of-society approach.
We also lead the national Take Our Kids to Work program, which is Canada’s most recognized career education program. We provide ongoing resources, videos and experts to support employers, educators, families and students to participate in introducing grade 9 students to the changing world of work. In 2025, we reached 1,169 employers and 1,159 educators, and supported 400,000-plus students to be engaged in career exploration. Our “Career Live” virtual engagement program also attracted 6,000 attendees from coast to coast to coast.
We are working to expand this grade 9 innovation into a network of employers, youth sector organizations and educational institutions that are supportive of a more integrated work-learning strategy from grade 9 forward, linking skill development, practical employment and education, and breaking down silos across these various systems.
SCC's art of work program also serves youth in later grades. As a result, we have been able to bring corporate funders and government partners to the table to work together to integrate employment and engagement in experiences and effective training practices across multiple sectors. Again, it's an emphasis on the whole-of-society approach.
We have also learned to recognize that youth have diverse employment needs. Some thrive in part-time roles, others in full-time, and some use the experience as an entryway to education. We assist our employers and employment program funders to adjust their expectations and offer to provide this kind of flexibility, particularly for placements designed for youth facing employment challenges in first and transitional employment.
The Students Commission of Canada enhances existing systems by partnering with local organizations, schools and employers. We leverage national and local connections, evidence-based research, and evaluation to co-create sustainable, community-rooted solutions. We believe in a world where all young people transition positively into a successful adulthood.