Is working with children for you? See how OU study can lead to this career
Spending time at home bringing up my three children made me realise what my own mum had put into bringing me up – all the time and energy she’d put into teaching me to play games, read books, and understand things about the world.
As the children got older and started school I found I had more time on my hands and I started to taking an interest in magazine articles on child development and programmes on TV. I also started going into their school some days to help out in the classroom. After seven years at home it did me good to be back in a work environment learning new skills.
One of the teachers suggested that I take things further by getting a qualification and handed me a leaflet about the OU. I went online and really liked the sound of it. I was a bit apprehensive to start with and thought I’d just do a little bit to see how I liked it.
I ended up loving it. I did two courses and got a certificate in Early Years Practice. After that I was hooked, I just kept going until I got a BA (Hons) in Childhood and Youth Studies.
Just after I started my studies, my husband became seriously ill. I continued my studies but it meant throughout my courses I managed to get to only one tutorial. But there is just so much support from tutors and fellow students that I never felt I was on my own.
My tutor would email me, or phone me, mostly about my work but sometimes just to ask how I was, which was really kind. And the students were fantastic.
It was a little community of people who really understood my situation - and many of whom were in similar situations themselves. If I told someone in the street I had three kids, a disabled husband, was working and also studying for a degree, they'd be shocked. But OU people tend to have very full lives – we really got so much support from each other.
I am so fulfilled and the Open University has brought this out in me. Being at home with the children, although I loved being with them, I sometimes feared my brain had seized up. The Open University helped to open it up again.
I now work two days a week helping children with special needs and I’m hoping to use my degree to get into social work - another area that really interests me.