Toolkit: Reframing Sport for Teenage Girls
This toolkit is inspired by our research into reframing sport for teenage girls to help welcome them into sport and physical activity.
This toolkit is inspired by our research into reframing sport for teenage girls to help welcome them into sport and physical activity.
Too many women and girls are needlessly missing out on the lifelong benefits and rewards of sport and physical activity during their teenage years.
How have girls' activity levels changed in the last year? Read our reflections on the 2020-21 Sport England Active Lives data.
Find out about our Daughters and Dads programme that aims to empower girls and their families through sport.
Our Big Sister project provided free gym memberships and support to encourage teenage girls to find and reclaim their love of exercise
Our proposed Checklist for Change lays out the core elements to which sports organisations should aspire, to build upon successes so far, and promote the benefits of having more women on boards and at executive level.
This research focuses on gender discrimination within sports volunteering and sets out best practice solutions to counter this disparity.
A new programme designed to provide a supportive space for teenage girls has launched to help girls find and reclaim the joy of sport.
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 aged 11-18 years old exercise less regularly and for less time than boys. 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.