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4Children

UK charity


Summary

UK charity

4Children was a charity organisation in the United Kingdom focused on children and families. Formerly, the National Out of School Alliance and then the Kids' Club Network, the organisation was established in 1983 for developing a concept of after-school provision following research conducted by the British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centre (BASSAC).

4Children ran 88 Sure Start Children's Centres across the country, 42 nurseries, 21 out-of-school clubs, and provided services in 24 activity centres at Royal Air Force bases in partnership with the RAF Benevolent Fund.

History

4Children

In 2004, Kids' Clubs Network changed its name to 4Children. It was officially launched at the organisation's annual policy conference, 'Tomorrow's World' at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in Westminster. The following year, the charity announced plans to expand their work by running children's centres in partnership with local government. In 2005, 4Children's first children's centre, the Carousel Centre in Essex, was launched. In 2009, 4Children launched the Family Commission, an inquiry that asked 10,000 families about their experiences of family life and family policy in the UK. Chaired jointly by Esther Rantzen and Anne Longfield, the report called for the extension of children's centres.

Partnership

4Children was Department for Education's strategic partner for early years. 4Children also ran a website, 4Children's Foundation Years to support early years professionals.

Campaign

The Make Space for Health campaign was the charity's longest running campaign to inform young people about healthy lifestyles.

Closure

4Children's corporate growth under its chief executive, Anne Longfield, was not matched by growing revenues, and the charity ran into financial trouble. It ceased operations and entered administration on 1 September 2016. Before its financial difficulties were publicly known, Longfield was appointed Children's Commissioner for England. Many of its functions were assumed by Action for Children.

References

References

  1. Bonel, Paul. (2000). "Good Practice in Playwork Second Edition: A Guide to Good Practice". Nelson Thornes.
  2. (20 August 2010). "4Children launches youth work projects for RAF | Children & Young People Now". cypnow.co.uk.
  3. (3 March 2004). "CHARITY RELAUNCH: Kids' Clubs unveils its new identity | Children & Young People Now". cypnow.co.uk.
  4. (22 March 2005). "Children's Centres: 4Children plans radical expansion | Children & Young People Now". cypnow.co.uk.
  5. Williams, Rachel. (22 February 2010). "Families say public services fail them". The Guardian.
  6. O'Hara, Mary. (31 May 2011). "4Children spearheads early years initiative". The Guardian.
  7. "Welcome to The Family Commission website".
  8. "Foundation Years". www.4children.org.uk.
  9. (2011). "RACING CLUB MAKE SPACE FOR TEENAGERS - Local - Warwick Courier". warwickcourier.co.uk.
  10. Butler, Patrick. (5 September 2016). "Childcare charity 4Children goes into administration". The Guardian.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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