Big Education Challenge from Big Change

Member Article

Big Change awards first ever Big Education Challenge winners

New projects to support young people with visual impairment, tackle food insecurity, and provide training pathways to address climate anxiety have won the Big Education Challenge, the £1 million prize fund from education charity, Big Change.

The prize fund is the first of its kind run by Big Change and was set up to identify, support and reward bold ideas with the potential to transform education and learning in the UK.

CanTeam led by Jonathan Harper has been awarded £225k to transform school canteens into vibrant community hubs by equipping schools to offer nutritious and delicious food after school, co-designed and delivered with young people, their families and the local community.

Jonathan Harper, CEO Future Foundations, said: “I am delighted that CanTeam has won the Big Education Challenge, too many young people and families are not accessing affordable and nutritious food, and with the support of Big Change we can pilot at scale. As a father of three, I am witness to the daily struggle’s families face. By serving food after school, creating a sustainable solution to food insecurity, encouraging healthy eating and enabling young people to learn and thrive, we can revolutionise the way our young people eat and create more sustainable and equitable communities.”

Force of Nature, led by Clover Hogan, also won £225k to addresses students’ climate anxiety by providing training pathways to help young people prepare for their roles in a green economy, building their confidence, developing their skills, and helping them find the climate solutions they wish to lead.

Clover Hogan, Force of Nature, said: “Young people have inherited the climate crisis, yet we’re being locked out of decisions governing our future. We need to equip this generation with the knowledge and tools to take action, and the opportunities to influence change. With support from the Big Education Challenge, we’re piloting training to help hundreds of young people develop skills in public speaking, advising decision-makers and supporting peers and teachers within schools. We’re so grateful to Big Change for this follow-up funding, and excited to build on the momentum of the work we started in 2023.”

Paige Connect, led by Sergio Gosalvez, was awarded £60k to support young blind and partially-sighted people to connect with learning and work independently or alongside others. By using technology to upgrade existing braille writers, Paige Connect enables better communication and collaboration with sighted teachers, family and friends.

Sergio Gosalvez, Paige Connect, said: “Braille is currently written manually by embossing paper using a braille writer. The writing cannot be stored, shared, or understood by people who cannot read braille, which is unacceptable in this digital age. Paige Connect will enable parents to read a translation of braille via an app – allowing them to assist their children’s education as they would a sighted child. This could be life changing for the 29,000 blind pupils in the UK, two-in-three of whom are estimated to be educated in mainstream schools.”

The winning projects are still at the early stage of development and will now go on to pilot their ideas. During 2023, each project leader received expert support and funding alongside other finalists to help them develop and test their idea.

The Big Education Challenge has also awarded £170,000 to three runners-up. These projects are helping young people deal with loss and trauma by developing social emotional skills, offering digital internships for young people who might otherwise struggle to access creative careers, and providing entrepreneurship skills and mentorship for young people at risk of joining gangs.

Essie North, CEO, Big Change said: “In launching the Big Education Challenge, we called for ideas that could help transform education and the winners are doing just that. They have turned their experience into insight and action - bravely testing and bringing their new ideas to life. These leaders, and all the finalists, are challenging assumptions about what education is and its purpose, about who gets to lead change, and the nature of the solutions needed.

“Discovering these brilliant ideas and people should give us all hope. Change in education is hard, and it takes brave and passionate people working together to make it happen. We are incredibly proud to support their journey, to show that change is possible, and I can’t wait to see the impact they will have on this and future generations.”

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Andrew McKay .

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