Partner Article
Lottery brings families together in learning
The Big Lottery Fund today launches a £40 million programme, ‘BIG’, to bring generations of families together through learning.
From today, groups including charities, community and voluntary bodies and schools can apply for awards of between £10,000 and £500,000 to help families bond whilst building life skills.
The programme aims to fund a variety of projects that will benefit families. Projects may include activities like gardening, cooking or building a birdhouse together and others might help with reading or maths, using elements of sports, arts, crafts and drama as a basis for learning.
Big Lottery Fund Chairman Sir Clive Booth said: “Family learning is a building block for children’s education. Children can absorb values, attitudes and culture, while parents and carers can gain a better understanding about how a child learns.”
Those behind the fund believe that some parents may lack confidence to learn because of unhappy school memories, or they may not have the means, language skills or the experience to get started. The three-year programme aims to support these parents and expose people to the benefits of family learning.
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Ruth Mitchell .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular morning National email for free.
Who speaks up for SMEs when giants get bigger?
The true value of HR in an AI-driven working world
What new business rates guidance means for pubs
Business success starts with people investment
It's time to confront the digital poverty crisis
Why a business exit is no longer all or nothing
Culture is the foundation for sustainable growth
Business must help young people take root in work
Purposeful procurement for long-term growth
Time to rethink outdated views on apprenticeships
The scale-ups rocketing through our fast world
Care about the experience, not just the outcome