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Young people and literacy

This section focuses on approaches to improving the literacy skills of young people who are not in contact with the formal education system, including the involvement of the youth service. Approaches related to schools can be found in the primary and secondary school sections.

Background
Useful links and organisations

Key issues



Background

Having poor literacy skills means young people cannot fully access the challenges of the school curriculum and are therefore more likely to underachieve. They may have the potential to achieve but have fallen behind for a variety of reasons - poor health, disruptive education, problems at home, poor teaching or perhaps difficulties because English is not their first language. If they are not able to catch up through additional school interventions or have parents who don't know how to help, young people can become passive and disinterested in learning; they can play up at school, or they simply stay away. There is some evidence that those who truant or stay out of school are more at risk of getting into trouble and committing crimes.

Statistics show that in 2004, there were 649,000 16 to 24-year-olds in the UK who were economically inactive and not in full-time education, and a further 405,000 unemployed. There are also an estimated 10,000 15-year-olds who are 'missing' from school in England and are not accounted for anywhere in the system. Each year more than five per cent of 15-year-olds leave school without any qualifications. (Prince's Trust, Reaching the Hardest to Reach, 2004 and Breaking barriers? Reaching the hardest to reach, 2003.)

Of course, having poor literacy is not the only reason why young people stay away from school, misbehave and underachieve, but it can be a contributory factor. In any case, if they miss a large part of their schooling, they will not get the qualifications they need to succeed. Finding ways to motivate young people and improve their literacy skills is vital.

Youth sector involvement with improving literacy skills

The last ten years has seen a sea change in the youth service's recognition that literacy is its concern. Central to this change of view was the partnership developed between the Youth Service and the library service, as part of a National Year of Reading-funded project in 1998-1999. This partnership began when the National Youth Agency teamed up with the library development agency Well Worth Reading (now The Reading Agency) to bring together youth workers and library workers on a range of ground-breaking initiatives with hard-to-reach young people. Projects took place in settings as diverse as youth clubs and homes for children in care, and made imaginative use of libraries. Boox for Us, as the initiative was called, was a great success. Conference showcases helped to spread the ideas and lessons learned throughout the youth service nationwide and, as a consequence, training in both sectors increased staff awareness of the issues involved.

Following this success, the programme was developed with funding from Arts Council England's New Audiences scheme. An action research programme, YouthBoox, explored which reading 'hooks' work most powerfully with young people aged 13-18. Nine local projects - in Liverpool, Sunderland, Norfolk, Oswestry, Coventry, Gloucestershire, East Sussex, Kensington and Essex - linked reading with computers, live literature and other art forms to encourage young people to share reading experiences and record their own lives as readers. 

Lessons from both projects were captured in three resource packs, The Reading Kit, which pass on the projects' findings on creating and maintaining partnerships. They illustrate the different approaches and activities that can be used for reader development and show how to structure young people's greater involvement in reading. For more information on YouthBoox visit www.readingagency.org.uk.
 




Youngsters to be paid to volunteer

Young people in deprived areas are to be paid to do community work in a government pilot to boost volunteering and civic renewal. The Young Volunteer Challenge is designed to encourage disadvantaged teenagers to spend a gap year doing community work before starting work, training or university. The £5 million Department for Education and Skills initiative will be piloted for two years in ten areas across the country, beginning in May 2003. 

The DfES hopes that 1,200 18 and 19-year-olds will decide to sign up to the scheme. To be eligible, applicants must have received a maintenance grant to help them continue their studies after the age of 16, or have claimed income support while undergoing vocational training. The chosen participants will work full time - defined as more than 30 hours a week - for nine months, earning £45 a week, with a completion award of £750 following the placement. 

Ivan Lewis, minister for young people and adult skills, launched a prospectus in March 2003, aimed at persuading voluntary organisations to participate in the scheme. He said: "Getting the volunteering habit early encourages lifelong volunteering, and broadens young people's horizons, helping to develop the skills and qualities which universities and employers value."

The prospectus, The Young Volunteer Challenge, can be viewed at www.dfes.gov.uk/youngpeople.

(Regeneration and Renewal, 7 March 2003)



Youth charities to benefit from £34 million cash pot

Youth charities can bid for a share of a £34 million cash pot set up by the New Opportunities Fund for ambitious new projects. The Uproject is aimed at 16-year-old school leavers who do not have a job or place within further education. In summer 2002, 16,000 teenagers attended residential week-long courses all over the country, participating in a range of activities from white-water rafting and DJ-ing to motor maintenance and designing CVs. 

Charities can apply to be lead agencies, running the activities, or to support the project through residential accommodation or expertise. Around 100 voluntary agencies are already signed up including Weston Spirit, the Trident Trust and Liverpool Hope. 

The Department for Education and Skills multi-million pound project is run through local Connexions partnerships, which will cover 47 areas throughout England by 2003. Barclays bank has given the project £600,000 in sponsorship and provided a brand, website and merchandise for the participants. 

(Third Sector, 24 July 2002)



Prince's Trust aims to raise millions to expand youth literacy pilot

The Prince's Trust aims to raise "tens of millions" in funding in autumn 2002 to expand a pilot project teaching literacy and numeracy skills to young people. The trust is currently undertaking a £5 million pilot project, funded by the Learning and Skills Council, to help young people, including the long-term unemployed and offenders, find jobs. The pilot is based on the Prince's Trust existing young people volunteers' programme which has been running for 16 years, but places more emphasis on writing and maths skills. 

The pilot will be evaluated in the autumn and a decision will be made whether to roll it out across the country later in the year. A spokeswoman for the charity said that if the pilot did go national, it would form part of a general revamp of the trust's volunteer programme. "We are looking for funding in the tens of millions from the Skills Council and our corporate sponsors," the spokeswoman said.

(Third Sector, 26 June 2002)


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