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New £100m school sport campaign Brown backs child sport campaign
(about 5 hours later)
Children will take part in five hours of sport each week as part of a new £100m National School Sport Strategy announced by the government. A campaign to make sport a part of every child's day has been announced by the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown.
The campaign will also provide a new National School Sport Week, where schools will run sports days and inter-school tournaments. Building on an earlier drive, he wants all school children to get the chance to do five hours of sport a week.
The measures aim to make sport a part of every child's day in the run up to the 2012 London Olympics. Teenagers aged 16-19 at further education colleges or out of education, employment or training, should be offered three hours a week.
But the Conservatives said the funds would not address key sporting issues. Currently children under 16 are required to do two hours a week within the national curriculum.
The campaign will be jointly delivered through the Department for Children, School and Families and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. But since 2004, the government has been encouraging schools to offer pupils an extra three hours of sport on top of this.
Under the plans, all pupils will take part in five hours of sport per week while three hours will be provided for young people aged 16 to 19. We need to make taking part in sport a national characteristic Gordon Brown
And a network of 225 competitive sport leaders across the country will work with primary and secondary schools to increase the amount of competitive sport on offer. The new £100m package announced by Mr Brown will mainly be used to target older teenagers not in school through community and local authority sports provision, the Department for Children, Schools and Families said.
Also, coaches in schools and the community will deliver expert sporting advice to young people. It builds on about £600m of funding already announced to support the take-up of PE in schools over the next three years.
Mr Brown called for a "united effort" to make sport a part of every child's day in the run up to the 2012 London Olympics.
He said: "I was lucky enough to have primary and secondary schools that had sport at the centre of their ethos. I want every child to have that opportunity to take part.
"Watching sport is a national pastime. Talking about sport is a national obsession. But now we need to make taking part in sport a national characteristic."
Parents, volunteers, coaches and the sporting world are also being encouraged, alongside schools, to get more youngsters involved in sport.
The push includes a new National School Sport Week, in which schools will be urged compete against each other, and a new network of 225 competition managers to work with schools to increase access to competitive sports.
PE teacher shortagesPE teacher shortages
But the shadow culture secretary Jeremy Hunt said the new funding failed to address all the issues surrounding children's participation in sport.But the shadow culture secretary Jeremy Hunt said the new funding failed to address all the issues surrounding children's participation in sport.
He said: "As usual when you look at the small print this turns out to be a classic piece of Brown spin.He said: "As usual when you look at the small print this turns out to be a classic piece of Brown spin.
"£100m between now 2012 turns out to be £20m a year, less than a tenth of the reduction in funding to grassroots sport as a result of his lottery raid to fund government pet causes. "£100m between now and 2012 turns out to be £20m a year, less than a tenth of the reduction in funding to grassroots sport as a result of his lottery raid to fund government pet causes.
"Whilst we welcome any initiative that increases participation in sport at schools, he has totally failed to address the shortage of trained PE teachers, the drop off rate in sport participation when people leave school, and the lack of links between schools and community clubs." "Whilst we welcome any initiative that increases participation in sport at schools, he has totally failed to address the shortage of trained PE teachers, the drop-off rate in sport participation when people leave school and the lack of links between schools and community clubs."
However a DCSF spokesman said the new money was specifically being used to target school leavers and those in FE colleges.
Currently, 37% of pupils take part in sporting competition between schools, and 71% within their own school.Currently, 37% of pupils take part in sporting competition between schools, and 71% within their own school.
The new funding is in addition to the £633 million already pledged by the government to the sport and PE system in the UK over the next three years.