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Blog on national organisations research

by Hannah McGrath | Nov 30, 2020 | Blog | 0 comments

Blog on national organisations research

Blog on national organisations research:

Read the survey here. 

In early 2020 the ten Children and Young People Sector Support organisations (ACE Bridges) commissioned a piece of research into how we could work more effectively with national organisations for the benefit of children across England. Real Ideas are the bridge for the South West. The work was commissioned pre the COVID-19 Pandemic and the research took place as the first national Lockdown started. This had a significant impact on the timescale of the research as many staff from the Learning and Participation departments of national organisations were furloughed. The research, however, was completed in the summer and we are really pleased to share the Executive Summary of the findings to support a more joined up and strategic conversation with national organisations over the next year.

The starting point for this work was the premise that national organisations are a highly significant asset and resource in the national cultural education ecology. Many have national touring remits and exercise a sector leadership role, with a strong brand identity, a reputation for quality provision, a range of models, programmes and a body of knowledge that has a status and currency particularly with schools outside of London. A significant amount of their national delivery is carried out through their learning and participation teams who are balancing innovation alongside large-scale delivery. Some national organisations also have the capacity to commission research, and many choose to invest in local and regional partnership infrastructure.

The Bridge organisations have a clear remit from Arts Council England to work strategically to ensure all children and young people can engage with high quality arts and culture. As a result, each Bridge has a significant knowledge of the variety of cultural and educational provision in their region and the communities they serve.

We found in our research that the dialogue and relationships between Bridges and National organisations has not been consistent. For instance, Bridges are often unaware when delivery takes place in a region and national organisation often unaware of how we might support them. This feels like a missed opportunity to create an equitable distribution of offers in a place and ensure that the wider cultural infrastructure collaboratively reaches the widest number of children and young people possible and achieves the greatest impact.

We were keen for the research to:

  • Provide insight to inform joint planning of schools/young people provision across the network of Bridges and national organisations.
  • Inform Arts Council England and other investors of key challenges and opportunities that are relevant to the development of a national strategy around schools’ engagement.
  • Uncover and share good practice across the cultural education community that will help raise the standard of work across the sector
  • Extend networks and contacts.
  • Provide greater awareness on questions of remit and specialism, that will help develop joint working in the future.

Since the work was commissioned obviously the world has changed significantly, and it is likely to continue to change over the coming months. The pressures on schools and cultural sector and the uncertainty we all face – individually and in terms of how we can work together more effectively – is going to be challenging. In the short term as we all reset and rebuild, the ten Bridges are planning to hold a series of conversations in the Spring of 2021 (more than likely online) to explore future collaboration, dialogue and partnership working with national organisations. Dates for these will be shared in early 2021.

One of the key findings from the research was that, until now Bridges have not had a consistent system for national bodies to engage with them. The ten Bridges are all unique organisations operating collaboratively, but within their own delivery systems. We accept that to reduce confusion we need a simple, clear way to ensure nationals can engage with the relevant Bridge for the regions they are considering working in. As a first step each Bridge has identified a lead individual as a point of contact. Details below:

Names of national leads:

Bridge Contact Email
A New Direction (London) Steve Moffit steve.moffitt@anewdirection.org.uk
Royal Opera House Bridge (Essex, Herts, Beds, North Kent)) Roxie Curry roxie.curry@roh.org.uk
Arts Works (South East) Louise Govier louisegovier@artswork.org.uk
Real Ideas Organisation (South West) Jemima Hurlock jemima.hurlock@realideas.org
Norfolk & Norwich Festival Bridge (East Anglia) Michael Corley michael@nnfestival.org.uk
Arts Connect (West Midlands) Helen Frost helen.frost@wlv.ac.uk
The Mighty Creatives (East Midlands) Emily York Emily.york@themightycreatives.com
Curious Minds (North West) Derri Burdon derri.burdon@curiousminds.org.uk
We are IVE (Yorkshire and Humber) Verity Clarke verity@weareIVE.org
Culture Bridge North East (North East) Bill Griffiths bill.griffiths@twmuseums.org.uk

We hope you enjoy the Executive Summary, and hope this is a first step to better co-ordination of regional and national cultural learning infrastructures that will place the aspirations, needs and situations of children and young people at their heart. We are grateful for the work of Natalie Highwood and Chloe Bird in undertaking the research.

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