Work coaches, who will decide whether claimants are fit for work-related activities under DWP plans, need not have even a single GCSE it has been revealed. In addition, job interviews are conducted without the DWP ever meeting the candidate and the questions asked, as well as suggested answers, are available online for under a tenner.

Disability News Service revealed last week that that the DWP had admitted that there are no minimum academic qualifications required to become a work coach in a jobcentre.

Yet under DWP plans, the work capability assessment (WCA) is to be abolished and it will be unqualified work coaches who will decide whether a universal credit claimant must undertake work-related activities.

This is a decision which is currently made by registered health professionals and the fact that it is to be handed over to work coaches with no medical knowledge whatsoever is causing alarm amongst claimants and many voluntary sector organisations.

Benefits and Work can reveal that not only do work coaches not need qualifications, but that the DWP never meet them before offering them a job and that there are websites that claim to offer a full list of questions and suggested answers for passing the online work coach interviews.

In 2020, the government announced it was going to double the number of work coaches in jobcentres by hiring an extra 13,500 people.

It wanted the first 4,500 new recruits in place within just three months of the announcement

Civils Service World explained how the DWP tackled this mass hiring challenge by using an outside company to create an entirely online, prerecorded recruitment process.

The high-speed, remote interview system that was devised at that stage is still in use today to recruit work coaches, with details of the process available on the DWP workcoach microsite.

After completing an application form, candidates are asked to undertake an online situational judgement test in which they have 40 minutes to consider 20 hypothetical scenarios. For each scenario there is a list of possible responses which candidates have to rank on a five-point scale from ‘extremely desirable’ to ‘extremely undesirable’.

Applicants who pass this test are then invited to take part in an online “interview”. A pre-recorded interviewer asks six questions, two each on: communicating and influencing; managing a quality service; and making effective decisions.

After each question, the candidate gets a minute’s thinking time and then automatic video recording begins and the candidate has three minutes to give their answer.

The video recording is then evaluated by DWP staff and successful candidates are offered a job at a local jobcentre.

A small industry has grown up to help people complete the application process successfully.

One website offers a “DWP Work Coach Mock Interview” with 30 interview questions and answer examples. A subscription to the site costs £6 for a week with anytime cancellation.

Other sites have forums where people who have been through the interview process share their experiences and lists of questions they were asked, such as:

“How do you explain something complex taking into account the end-users' needs.”

 “Tell me about a time you had to manage a complex issue to bring about great service.”

A forum poster on one site explained that some jobcentres even run groups where you can discuss the application process and talk to other people who are going through it.

All of this may be fine for people whose aim is to get a job where they can support other people into employment.

Buts as DNS pointed out, decisions about whether a disabled person must carry out work-related activity are “life-changing – and potentially life-ending – decisions”.

To have a recruitment and selection process where candidates don’t need any qualifications whatsoever and where you appoint people before you meet them seems ill-conceived and dangerous.

Under the DWP plans, entirely unqualified work coaches will decide whether someone with a complex mental health condition or a serious physical health issue is able to undertake work-related activities. They will then then decide precisely what those activities should be, without the claimant having any right of appeal. And they will then have the power to recommend that the claimant is sanctioned and suffers a catastrophic loss of income if they are unable to carry out those activities.

Abolishing the WCA and replacing it with the  decisions of unqualified work coaches selected according to their ability to answer multiple choice questions and perform in front of a web cam is not progress, it’s irresponsible and potentially deadly cost-cutting.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Rosie · 11 months ago
    Many of the so-called health professionals have no understanding of the physical and mental problems that claimants have. It was already ridiculous that these people can ignore or override the opinions of claimants' GPs and Consultants.  Farming out such an important and potentially life-changing decision to a bunch of unqualified work coaches will make the system even less fit for purpose than it already is -  I didn't think that would actually be possible.  Why does this government (or any sane person for that matter) believe that any Tom Dick or Harry can be a decent work coach merely by giving them that job title?? It's all part of the "say it loud enough and often enough and it'll be true" attitude that bedevils our government.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Jen · 11 months ago
    This has got to be reported on all the News Channels Sky etc.
    I am a retired Nurse, and the thought of a young unqualified person making decisions about my or anyone’s Medical issues is beyond belief. 
    Unless you are Disabled  and in pain daily, they would not begin to understand. 
    This is deliberate victimisation of members of society. This is not lawful. 
    Tge courts must be informed and make a judgement. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Elaine Ward · 11 months ago
      @Jen I agree it’s as if the media aren’t interested in this at all!! Or the Labour party
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Toni · 11 months ago
      @Jen nothing to report its nonsense and many workcoaches have health issues of their own
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    C · 11 months ago
    I find they're all so condescending until they look at my CV and see I could do their job better than them. Suddenly they treat me with more respect. I've supported people going to try and claim and the way they're treated is awful, then I step forward and suddenly their behaviour changes. I know some claimants have appalling behaviour but they shouldn't be treating everyone like they do. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Peter · 11 months ago
      @C I think the 'appalling' behaviour stems from years of being dismissed as a fully sentient human being with the same universal intrinsic rights to shelter nutrition positive regard opportunities 😀 

      We only see a split second of a person's whole story.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Andy Coyne · 11 months ago
    This is appalling! I am a retired disabled person butbthrough various Facebook forums I know literally thousands of people that would be affected by this. You must get this properly into the news!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    David · 11 months ago
    Giving completely unqualified work coaches the power to decide whether or not someone with complex health issues, be they physical or otherwise, is able to work is nothing short of scandalous and will surely be tested in the courts. The fact that this ‘government’ would even consider such a measure is indicative of their worldview in general. There are no words to describe just how despicable this lot are. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Elizabeth Vidler · 11 months ago
    Personally I have given up any hope of being treated like a human being with feelings and needs, nobody in any party has any empathy.  I wrote to my MP about the issue of WCA being abolished and what was his opinion on it for those with long term and fluctuating conditions, and frankly like everytime I have dealt with him I just got alot of party policy which I already knew, so goodbye conservatives and no to labour or lib dem they think we are collateral damage which nobody cares less about. I expect to lose my money without a backward glance from anybody.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Mike · 11 months ago
    my guess is looks like their a labour Lib Dem government on the way and they especially the Lib Dem’s will put a stop to it all 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      JoJo · 9 months ago
      @Kerry It’s not about bullying. These are the directives that have been to work coaches by the government as in the sense that a lot of people can do some form of work. From my tears of experience as a work coach this is true. Many of us had health issues but were able to work. If you spent a week as a work coach you would definitely have a different mindset. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sue · 11 months ago
      @Linda Labour were responsible for the initial change in assessing disabled people. They brought in WCA and PIP using guidance from UNUM the disability deniers in the USA. Even America said their methods were inhumane. Admitted the Tories carried it on.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Linda · 11 months ago
      @Aw Spot on. 100% agree with you.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Linda · 11 months ago
      @Kerry You could not be more right. I have been wishing my life away since before I was 60, assuming I could retire then; only to have them dump another 6 years on me. I finally reach the magic number this December and can 'retire' from the circle of hell that is the DWP and all they stand for!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Linda · 11 months ago
      @Mike You've got to be kidding, yes? The Lib Dems voted with the Tory's Welfare Reform Bill when they were in coalition with them. If you truly believe that they will do the right thing I fear you are going to be desperately disappointed. And if you think Labour will do anything either, sadly that applies with them as well.
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