Department for Business, Innovation and Skills
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£20 million invested to kickstart The Learning Revolution

£20 million invested to kickstart The Learning Revolution

News Release issued by the COI News Distribution Service on 08 September 2009

Creative music master classes for people out of work or education, learning adventures for isolated older people and access to digital technologies in a Tyneside Cinema are all on offer thanks to a significant investment in ‘learning for pleasure’ announced by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) today.

The £20 million Transformation Fund, launched by Government to offer grants for more than 213 innovative informal adult learning projects in England, will bring to life The Learning Revolution, a White Paper presented to Parliament in March 2009.

The projects, many spearheaded by partnerships between public, private and third sector organisations, will help improve mental health, physical well-being, active citizenship and community cohesion, as well as providing a stepping stone towards further learning, qualifications and employment for many people.

Projects include:

· An initiative to engage more than 2,000 adults who are not currently in training, employment or education, through celebrity-led creative music and media tasters, master classes and workshops, led by a partnership which includes Global Radio, the parent group of Heart FM, LBC and Galaxy stations.

· A partnership between Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive, Merseytravel, Urbis and a National Trust property which will create ‘learning journeys’ for young people 19-25, older people living in isolation and people recovering from substance abuse. Each learner will use a free bus pass to take journeys around travel ‘lines’, including the Engineering Line, the Football Line and the Mersey Beat Line.

· A project at Tyneside Cinema, in partnership with Newcastle University, to use the cinema’s new spaces and facilities to deliver digital technology, moving image, communications and IT learning to a wide range of people from different social backgrounds and develop online learning tools for others to share.

· A massive campaign, led by Booktrust and delivered through GP surgeries, libraries and Adult Education centres, to inspire thousands of over-60s to take up reading or writing for pleasure.

Kevin Brennan, Minister for Further Education, Skills and Consumer Affairs, said:

“We’re happy to announce 213 successful recipients of our Transformation Fund grants, awarded in the face of stiff competition from a field of 1,400 applications. With projects ranging from creative writing and music to reading and art, it’s encouraging to see so many imaginative ideas for giving adults more opportunities to learn for the love of it.”

“The benefits of learning for pleasure in an informal setting are wide-ranging, and they benefit the community as well as the individual. I hope that many people will develop the confidence and the local connections to take a big step towards a brighter future.”

The announcement about the latest Transformation Fund grants follows the award of £1 million worth of ‘early bird’ funding in July.

Alan Tuckett, Chief Executive of NIACE, added:

“NIACE is proud to have the role of supporting the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in managing the Transformation Fund. We argued in our response to the Informal Adult Learning consultation that there is no better stimulus for local adult learning providers than the creation of a fund to trigger innovation and new partnerships.”

“There’s already evidence from the ‘early bird’ bids of how creative and imaginative community-based adult learning can be when given the funding to put ideas into practice.”

Informal adult learning encompasses a wide variety of activities and can range from a self-organised reading group in a village hall to a guided visit to nature reserve or stately home. Other Learning Revolution activities include The Learning Revolution Festival: a month-long celebration of informal adult learning that kicks off in October 2009.

To find out more about The Learning Revolution, visit: www.bis.gov.uk/learningrevolution

Notes to Editors

1. To find out what the Transformation Fund grants are for, download the Learning Revolution Transformation Fund prospectus at www.transformationfund.org.uk/about-transformation-fund

2. Through the Transformation Fund grants, partnerships of public, private and third sector organisations in England are creating projects to:

· Encourage more and different people into informal learning, particularly people from disadvantaged groups;

· Open up access to learning in new places, in new ways and at more flexible times;

· Support people to set up self-organised groups and learning clubs;

· Widen choice, by developing and sharing innovative content;

· Build partnerships and strengthen the capacity of informal adult learning organisations;

· Improve connections and progression between different kinds of learning; and

· Make better use of broadcasting and technology to stimulate and support learning.

3. The Transformation Fund adds to the £210 million which the Government has already ring-fenced to support informal adult learning. The Government also invests £360 million each year in museums and galleries, £10 million in UK online centres, libraries and other community venues and £21.5 million in union learning.

Contacts:

BIS Press Office
NDS.BIS@coi.gsi.gov.uk

Mark Malbas
Phone: 020 7215 5303
Mark.Malbas@berr.gsi.gov.uk

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