04-04-2025 12:01 PM
04-04-2025 12:01 PM
I’m interested in becoming a peer support worker
I have a degree in psychology and 3/4 degree in counselling (from like 10 years ago ish) and a lived experience of schizophrenia, but I have not worked in the industry yet.
I’m wondering, how common is peer support work? I’m not seeing a lot of advertising for workers in my area, anyone got any tips for how to get into it?
thanks!
04-04-2025 12:20 PM
04-04-2025 12:20 PM
Hey @Theodorea great to have you on the forums!
Best people to ask are probably some of our peer support workers on here
@tyme @RiverSeal @Jynx @Ru-bee @rav3n @moderator
(There's more but they're the ones I know off the top of my head)
This might be able to help too
04-04-2025 12:32 PM
04-04-2025 12:32 PM
04-04-2025 04:16 PM
04-04-2025 04:16 PM
hey @Theodorea there are definitely peer support jobs out there! i've noticed that in the last few years there's been more opportunities open up, and i have my fingers crossed that it will continue growing.
jobs vary on their criteria - some want to hire those with a psychology/counselling/social work/peer work qualification, some don't mind as long as the person as lived experience and/or experience supporting others.
i'll link in those peer support webinar and threads that ElephantEar3 mentioned, feel free to check them out and ask questions! 😊
04-04-2025 06:41 PM
04-04-2025 06:41 PM
Thanks!
yesterday
Hi Theadora,
Lived experience / peer support workers are definitely gaining more traction. If you are in the Sydney area, specifically the South Eastern Local Health District, I know they have a college called The Recovery College at their Safe Haven Hub. They have short courses / lived experience worker run workshops on getting into the space and it's free. There is a need for it within the public health system, and in support work for NDIS, youth work, aged care, and many other fields. It's not so much about your qualifications, though that will obviously help, but more about you sharing your story on recovery and offering hope when the people you support may not be able to hold hope for themselves. Empathy and compassion and judgement free are most important, and from what I read on your post, I feel that you have all of that and more. Most roles will pay for you to go through the Cert III Peer Worker TAFE course.
I hope this has been helpful for you and wish you all the best on your journey!
an hour ago
I've worked as a peer worker last 5 years
suss out ethicaljobs.com
good place to start
We need more people on the industry who give a sh!t to be completely honest
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