Occupational Summary
A Level 4 apprenticeship for Early Intervention Practitioner prepares apprentices in roles such as assistant senior care worker, assistant social worker, children's centre worker, community worker, early help practitioner, early intervention advisor, early intervention alcohol case worker, early intervention and prevention worker, family support worker, lead reablement worker, pastoral and school inclusion officer and violence prevention worker to deliver person-centred, voluntary early intervention across the life course. Apprentices provide practical help and emotional support, assess and identify needs, develop and implement support plans, coordinate single- or multi-agency responses, carry out home and community visits, prioritise safety and consent, build trust with individuals and their networks, and maintain auditable records to prevent escalation to statutory services.
This Level 4 apprenticeship comprises 68 KSBs (knowledge, skills and behaviours), has a typical duration of 18 months and a maximum funding band of £5,000. End-point assessment is via a presentation with questions and a professional discussion underpinned by a portfolio. The standard emphasises early, consent-based intervention, risk identification, collaborative multi-agency working and the maintenance of comprehensive, legally compliant documentation.
View official Skills England source text
This occupation is found in statutory and voluntary organisations who can provide person-centred, early intervention approaches and services to support individuals across all age ranges, from pre-birth to end of life. Early Intervention Practitioners offer practical help and emotional support to individuals experiencing a range of problems to help them overcome concerns or barriers impacting their daily lives, such as alcohol, drug or gambling misuse, behavioural issues, mobility issues and learning difficulties. They provide impartial information, advice, support and guidance to individuals and others impacted by the individual’s circumstances, such as their family and friends. The broad purpose of the occupation is to provide intervention services early in identified cases to help prevent a more complex, statutory-driven solution needed later. Early intervention work is a voluntary, consent-based service where individuals are encouraged to engage with the services and support offered but can choose not to engage if they wish. However, many individuals do choose to engage with the services offered as they recognise how the support can benefit their lives and those impacted by their circumstances. An Early Intervention Practitioner is responsible for identifying and sourcing the right intervention at the right time in an individual’s life in order to achieve mutually agreed outcomes. They work in a number of different environments within the community depending on the types of individuals they are supporting and may visit an individual in their home environment, or meet in a neutral location of the individual’s choosing. Early intervention work involves identifying risks, focusing on the voice of the individual and building relationships and trust with the individual and their wider network, in order to provide timely, flexible and effective support. They adopt a collaborative, evidence-based approach aimed at building on the capacity and resilience of individuals by supporting them to take responsibility and ownership for themselves, which may also involve input from the individual’s, family, friends and other professionals. Support provided could involve a single agency input or require coordinating a multi-agency response. They are responsible for ensuring effective collaboration and appropriate information sharing between partner agencies to ensure the individual gets the right help at the right time, focusing on the emerging needs of individuals and managing the support required to help prevent escalation to social care or other statutory partner thresholds. Early Intervention Practitioner roles offer a wide range of support to individuals across all age ranges. For example, a Lead Reablement Worker may focus on supporting and empowering adults to enhance their quality of life, maximise potential and continue to develop independence skills within their own homes. They might do this by, for example, creating and implementing a support plan for older person to rebuild their confidence and regain lost skills after being injured in a fall, to ensure they can remain independent in their own home rather than needing residential care. In a different setting, a Violence Prevention Worker may deliver behavioural change interventions with adults in a way that shows an understanding of domestic violence and its effect on the victim, prioritising the safety of the victim and their children. In another setting, a Pastoral and School Inclusion Officer would be responsible for finding solutions to keep young people in school wherever possible, or if that's not possible, to ensure they get an education somewhere else. They might do this by supporting pupils with identified behavioural issues to achieve their potential through targeted support and interventions, whilst working closely with parents and relevant professionals. In their daily work, an employee in this occupation interacts with: The individual, their family and wider network. Colleagues within their own team, their line manager, and other professionals within a variety of service provisions. Provision may include working with representatives from education, health, care, therapeutic services, housing, financial assistance, youth justice, probation, social care and the police. An employee in this occupation will be responsible for: Identifying the early intervention need within cases through analysis and assessment Working with their manager and colleagues to distribute cases amongst the team appropriately. Working with partner agencies, including participating in multi-agency meetings where they may also be responsible for chairing the meeting. Reflecting on, and reviewing outcomes and progress, in a timely and appropriate manner Solving issues effectively to maintain relationships both with individuals/families and other professionals whilst considering organisational and legal requirements. Ensuring all documentation is maintained and auditable for legal or agency requirements as well as quality inspections, e.g. the Care Quality Commission, OFSTED.
What's in the Delivery Pack?
Every section is tailored specifically to the ST0868 standard, using official KSB data, the published assessment plan, and sector-specific context.
KSB Interpretations
Plain-English interpretation of every Knowledge, Skill and Behaviour
EPA Preparation
End-point assessment readiness, gateway checklist and method guidance
Delivery Risks
Occupation-specific risks, mitigations and early warning signs
Delivery Model Options
Model-selection guide comparing day release, block release and front-loaded approaches
On/Off-the-Job Mapping
Which KSBs are best taught by the provider vs developed in the workplace
Initial Assessment & RPL
Starting points, prior learning recognition and programme adaptation
English, Maths & Digital
Where functional skills embed naturally and standalone qualification guidance
Employer Engagement Guide
Employer commitments, progress reviews and workplace engagement guidance
Get the ST0868 Delivery Guide
Unlock all 8 AI-powered sections — KSB interpretations, EPA preparation, delivery risks, employer engagement, and more. Tailored to Early intervention practitioner.
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English & Maths
English and maths qualifications must be completed in line with the apprenticeship funding rules .
Typical Job Titles
Knowledge, Skills & Behaviours
Knowledge
31- K1: Legislation, statutory guidance, national, local and organisational policies and procedures in relation to individuals a...
- K2: Principles and benefits of local and national multi-agency and multi-disciplinary working.
- K3: Stages of, and factors that affect development, transitions and changes individuals may go through, and the impact they ...
- K4: Legislation and organisational procedures for safeguarding, the protection of vulnerable people and combating extremism ...
- K5: When and how to escalate and de-escalate individual cases beyond own responsibility.
- + 26 more items
Skills
31- S1: Apply legislation, statutory guidance, national, local and organisational policies and procedures to meet the needs of i...
- S2: Gather information and guidance from professionals in multi-agencies and multi-disciplines to inform practice and suppor...
- S3: Identify relevant factors and how these have impacted on the needs of the individual and their family.
- S4: Identify and respond to safeguarding, protection, vulnerable people and extremism concerns.
- S5: Manage, and respond to assessed strengths, risks and accessing support when beyond own area of responsibility.
- + 26 more items
Behaviours
6- B1: Engage with individuals and their wider network, colleagues and partner agencies to collectively promote best outcomes.
- B2: Have professional curiosity and be willing to explore different approaches in practice.
- B3: Be responsive to need and adapt to different situations.
- B4: Be reflective, caring and considerate of self and others and be able to draw upon and build support networks.
- B5: Learn from success and mistakes, to continuously review approach.
- + 1 more items
Duties (11)
Undertake assessments of risks and strengths with the individual and or family to ensure that the correct people or organisations are working with the individual or family
Assess and analyse difficult or complex situations using evidenced-based practice to develop an action plan with consent given by individual or family.
Manage cases, providing direct intervention in line with policies and procedures.
Analyse and respond to identified personal and individual and or family risk from an organisational perspective.
Manage working relationships with partner agencies using effective communication to achieve the desired outcomes for individuals and families.
Manage referrals, transitions and closures, and provide information, advice and guidance (IAG) to individuals and families.
Develop and support relationships to increase engagement between individuals, their families and professionals, using coaching and mentoring approaches.
Develop own continual professional development to support the delivery of good outcomes.
Engage in regular professional supervision, to support and enhance the quality of own practice and maintain well-being.
Record and maintain accurate records for each case, ensuring they are compliant with organisational policies, guidance, use of digital technologies and best practice.
Consider environmental and contextual factors in the approach to supporting early interventions and the achievement of good outcomes for individuals and families.
End-Point Assessment
Assessment Plan
Type: HTML
Version & Source
- Version
- 1.1
- Occupational standard, end-point assessment plan and funding band revised.
- Last changed
- 28 Sept 2025
- Earliest start
- 28 Sept 2025
- Approved for delivery
- 27 May 2021
- EQA Provider
- Ofqual
- Sector Subject Area
- 1.3 Health and social care
- Trailblazer
- TB0566
- Last checked
- 11 Mar 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
What knowledge, skills and behaviours are in the ST0868 standard?▼
The Early intervention practitioner apprenticeship has 31 knowledge items, 31 skills, and 6 behaviours that apprentices must demonstrate.
How long is the Early intervention practitioner apprenticeship?▼
The typical duration is 18 months, with a maximum funding band of £5,000.
What does a delivery guide for ST0868 include?▼
The KSB Planner delivery guide includes plain-English KSB interpretations, EPA preparation guidance, delivery risk analysis, on/off-the-job mapping, employer engagement strategies, and more — all tailored to ST0868.
Data sourced from Skills England. KSB Planner delivery guides are an interpretation and planning aid based on official published source material — not an official regulator-issued document.