Your search for "women and girls" returned 796 results:
New resources are being rolled out to girls in secondary schools as part of a campaign to empower them to get their peers active.
Periods remain a top reason why teenage girls opt out of PE. In our latest blog, Sophie Newman, Director of Learning for PE and Vocational Education at New College Leicester, dives into the impact of menstruation on girls' physical activity.
Discover how educators can help break this barrier and empower girls to embrace sport confidently.
New YST Girls Active report is one of the biggest ever surveys looking specifically at girls' activity.
Data released today by children’s charity the Youth Sport Trust shows more than one in three girls have a desire to coach/lead in school but only a small number are currently taking up the opportunity.
Girls Active Northern Ireland is an award-winning, school-based intervention, designed to provide a support framework for schools to review and increase participation in physical education (PE), sport and physical activity by adolescent girls. The following report evaluated the impact of Girls Active Northern Ireland from its inception in 2016 to 2020.
Sport England has today launched its 10-year Uniting the Movement strategy.
This report summarises responses to the Girls Active Pre-Intervention Questionnaire that female pupils completed between November 2020 and May 2021.
Enjoyment. It’s what most of us in the sport, physical activity and PE world first think of when it comes to taking part in sport. After all, if we don’t enjoy it, what’s the point? Sadly, that isn’t the case for everyone.
Girls are being supported to enjoy being physically active all month long through a new partnership between Citron Hygiene, Aunt Flow and the Youth Sport Trust.
The FA’s Shooting Stars initiative launches today in 1,200 primary schools across England to inspire girls to get active and learn the fundamentals of football.
New research finds girls' confidence and enjoyment in physical activity plummets as puberty begins.
As a National Children’s Charity we rely on grants and donations to enable us to deliver our mission. Therefore we are not able to offer any grants to directly fund individuals, schools or community groups. Listed below are some of the main organisations and places providing information about funding opportunities.