On the blog this week, find out how Arts Award is being embedded into the new Cultural Citizens Programme by three pilot areas giving 600 young people increased access to the arts and culture.
Announced back in August by the Department for Culture Media and Sport, the Cultural Citizens Programme is one of the key proposals from the Culture White Paper and will target areas in England where there is low cultural engagement. This includes disadvantaged communities where fewer people currently visit museums, galleries or the theatre.
Young people will be offered a range of cultural activities such as free visits to local plays, behind the scenes access to museums and galleries and exclusive trips to world class venues – so they can develop a lifelong love of the arts.
Participants in some areas will build new skills, including learning to use social media accounts or being tour guides. All the work that the young people do will be accredited through the Arts Award, so they will finish the programme with a qualification to recognise and accredit their achievements.
The programme is being led by Arts Council England and delivered as a pilot by A New Direction (in Barking and Dagenham), Curious Minds (in Liverpool and Blackpool) and Kids in Museums (in Birmingham) with support from Historic England and the Heritage Lottery Fund. If the pilot is successful, it will be rolled out across the country to thousands of young people.
Take a look at this film on YouTube - a poem called 'A Strange Kind of Beauty' by Selina Nwulu, Young Poet Laureate for London 2015/16. The poem was commissioned by A New Direction as a response to the challenges young Londoners face in engaging and contributing to the creative and cultural life of their city.