The Lionesses Legacy: first steps to equality for girls in PE
Today, on International Women’s Day, the Government has announced more than £600 million of funding which will be invested in school sport.
Today, on International Women’s Day, the Government has announced more than £600 million of funding which will be invested in school sport.
Girls aged between 9-15 years old in pilot areas are to be offered exclusive free gym memberships to help improve confidence, wellbeing and activity.
We welcome the publication of the McKinney Report into the culture of Cricket Scotland and its treatment of women.
We welcome Department for Education's latest guidance to improve access to sport in schools.
Girls are less active than boys and by age 13 – 15, only 8% of girls meet the Chief Medical Officer’s recommendation that young people aged 5 – 18 should do 60 minutes of physical activity every day.
The Play Their Way campaign calls on coaches to put child-first coaching at the heart of their approach to tackle the sporting ‘enjoyment gap’ between girls and boys
Girls are hearing harmful stereotypes that make them feel like they don't belong in sport as early as five years old.
Too many girls are disengaging from sport and exercise in their teens. Read our research to understand the challenges and how we can overcome them.
This week, the Government published its updated sport strategy; the first update since 2015. The gender activity gap won’t close on the back of good intentions; we need targeted investment to help level the playing field for women and girls.
A consortium of three charities has been awarded £1m from the final Tampon Tax Fund to help improve confidence, wellbeing and activity levels amongst teenage girls.