| Young People & British Identity |
Young People and British Identity is a report produced by the Camelot Foundation and Ipsos MORI, following research among young people aged 16-21 in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. It also discusses issues surrounding the need to engage with young people and how best to achieve this in a meaningful and productive way.
The report cites Youth at Risk's Ballet Hoo project as an example of good practice.
"In contrast to the meritocratic, winner-loser depiction of singing success of The X Factor, Ballet Hoo (Ballet Changed My Life) demonstrates a way of approaching young people which evokes emergent cultural codes. It is the story of a project run with professional dancers from Birmingham Royal Ballet and the charity Youth at Risk to help disadvantaged young people commit to learning the skill and discipline of ballet in the hope of providing the same order in their ownchaotic lives.
Central to the success of the project is that the young people are presented with real aims and tangible outcomes and the language of respect is reser ved for those students who have gone through a process, rather than for the judges (in contradiction to The X Factor). The tone of voice throughout is ‘Adult to Adult’ – one of the few places in the texts analysed where young people were constructed as Adult, with the power to make decisions and rational judgments without appealing primarily to their Child emotions". |
© Youth At Risk 2007
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