Category
Donations to Coram Shakespeare Schools Foundation to be doubled through Champions for Children appeal
This June, Coram Shakespeare Schools Foundation (CSSF) will take part in The Childhood Trust's 'Champions for Children' campaign, which will see all donations to the charity between 6 and 20 June doubled.
New research: disadvantaged children miss out as the Government’s childcare plans fail to level up children’s chances
The Government’s planned £4billion investment in childcare will disproportionately benefit higher income families unless it is retargeted to help the most disadvantaged children, say Coram Family and Childcare and The Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
The speeches Shakespeare “forgot” to write… a new creative competition for children and young people launches to celebrate 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s First Folio
What if Shakespeare’s characters had more to say? What could Romeo tell us about peers who resort to violence? What does Isabella have to say at the end of Measure for Measure? We will soon find out as today Coram Shakespeare Schools Foundation (CSSF) launches What You Will, a new national creative competition inviting children and young people aged 8-25 to take a fresh look at Shakespeare’s plays and to create a new speech for one of the characters.
Identity, adoption and mixed-raced heritage – In-Between Lines project at Coram
Student Anthony Lynch, one of the organisers of the In-Between Lines project at Coram, explains what it is setting out to achieve.
Coram Family and Childcare responds to Budget 2023 childcare announcements
Megan Jarvie, Head of Coram Family and Childcare, comments on the Budget 2023 announcement that free childcare will be expanded to one and two-year olds in England.
Coram survey finds childcare shortages nationwide with the most disadvantaged children missing out
Coram Family and Childcare’s 22nd annual Childcare Survey published today reveals a sharp drop in childcare availability across England over the past year, with only half of local areas reporting sufficient childcare for children under two, a decrease of 7% on 2022, and under half (48%) reporting enough childcare for parents working full-time, a decrease of 11% on last year.