''' Compass is a registered not-for-profit Charity providing further education, skills based training and vocational pathways to young people with intellectual and physical disabilities. Since its inception it has rewritten the rule book about what a Disability Service looks like and what it can achieve. In 2018 Compass was inducted into the Sunshine Coast Business Hall of Fame and was runner up in the Queensland Community Organisation of the Year. It has garnered incredible community and corporate support and is the fastest growing service of its kind in Queensland. Uniquely it has developed a wide range of social enterprises that provide flexible vocational opportunities for its trainees. Above everything else it has helped young people with disabilities and their families to dream… and then to achieve those dreams. Commencing in 1991 the organisation provided Alternative Education programmes to youth at risk in local secondary and primary schools with over 7,000 school students benefiting from an evergrowing range of specialist programmes. The Compass Education & Training Service commenced in 2003 with 3 trainees and one staff member. The service has experienced approximately 35% per annum growth and now supports over 200 trainees through 80 staff across five centres and 12 social enterprises – micro businesses that include the 20-acre Compass Farm, Connections Cafe, Harvest Kitchen, Wabi Sabi, The Garden Cafe, Rakes and Panes and Earth & Wood. In 2016 Compass commenced its Assistance Dogs Programme, purchasing and training pups to support children with autism and/or intellectual disabilities. The programme engages with corporate sponsors who support the costs of raising and training a pup for 2 years and in return have naming rights for the pup along with significant co-branded media and promotional opportunities across the working life of the dog – up to ten years. This support allows Compass to essentially gift the dog to the child in need. The programme has been so successful that Compass is now launching this life changing programme nationally.
Education
The Compass Institute Inc. provides further education in a broad range of subjects. The goal of the Institute is to provide real life skills with a focus on personal development and independent living. This includes literacy, numeracy, communication, fitness, social skills, food preparation, personal grooming, transport and community participation. Compass employs staff in roles such as teachers, trainers, coaches and mentors, similarly those that attend Compass are students or 'Trainees' and not referred to as 'clients'.
Training and vocation
The organisation works on making pathways for disabled young people to become increasingly independent. Central to Compass training and vocation units is the provision of "real further education, skills-based training and vocational opportunities as part of a structured pathway to social and economic participation". Through the vocational pathways Compass provides, people with a disability have successfully been placed into appropriate and rewarding work. The Compass Institute Inc. is involved in setting up social enterprises as vocational pathways for its trainees. These are ‘real life’ businesses that are integrated into the local community, including lawn and garden maintenance, Vehicle detailing, business support services, art and craft markets and the Compass Farm. The purchase of an 8 hectare property enabled the organisation to set up an innovative educational and vocational setting, known as the Compass Farm. At this facility trainees can undertake vocational training, work experience and therapy. In 2011, 20 people with disabilities, ranging in ages from 20 to 30 undertook training and work programs at the property. Activities range from animal husbandry, mixed horticulture, nursery work and property maintenance work.
Martial values
Underpinning the structure and organisation of both the service provision and management of Compass are the philosophies of Japanese Budo. The early work of the Aikido Institute involved running intervention programs and life skills classes that used Aikido and Budō to help students with goal setting, anger management, time management, and self-defence. These "unique experiential programs" employed the principles of traditional martial arts philosophy and practice to engage students. From here Compass branched out into the disability service, but the role of Aikido and budo philosophy has never ceased to have an important role in the running of Compass. Compass CEO David Dangerfield has been using martial arts to help build physical skills and self-confidence in people for over 30 years. He saw the potential to do the same with people with both physical or intellectual disabilities. "These individuals are always reminded of what they can't do, Martial arts is something they can do. It's a great physical outlet..."