Birmingham's Creative Future: Empowering Youth through Arts & Culture

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Birmingham's strategy for the arts, culture, and young people focuses on increasing access to the arts, enhancing the quality of activities, acknowledging achievements, and enabling progress in engagement and skills development. The Creative Future initiative, developed in response to the Children's Act 2006, aims to support Every Child Matters outcomes. It has evolved to include broader cultural provision, emphasizing audience engagement, participation, creation, and leadership opportunities for young individuals. This model has been widely embraced in the city, contributing to the improved quality of arts activities for youth through various programs and initiatives.


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  1. Birminghams strategy for the arts, culture & young people

  2. Developed in partnership with voluntary, third sector, arts and educational organisations, young people, parents and carers

  3. A Creative Future I: First developed in response to the introduction of the Children s Act 2006, articulating the role that the city s arts sector plays in supporting Every Child Matters outcomes for young people aged 0 19 years. Key objectives: increase children and young people s access to the arts raise the quality of arts activities for children and young people Recognise the achievements of children and young people in the arts Enable children and young people to progress in their engagement with the arts, developing their skills and interest

  4. A Creative Future II: Further developed in 2009 in response to the government s introduction of a national model for cultural entitlement, extending the Creative Future model to the wider cultural sector. Greater focus on: identifying and filling gaps in cultural provision across Birmingham universal provision with targeted support for additional needs and identified talent four key roles young people should have the opportunity to occupy in their engagement with the arts - audience member, participant, creator and leader a model for deepening engagement and progression from first cultural experiences through to independent engagement

  5. A model embraced by the cultural sector and well established throughout the city Very effective in improving the quality of arts activity for, with and by young people, city-wide Supported through arts organisations revenue funding agreements and Arts Activities Commissioning Next Generation scheme

  6. Examples of Creative Future delivery programmes have included: Filter.me.uk cultural portal for young people Young people s showcasing programmes Verbalise & Visualise Young People on Arts Boards training and placement scheme Family Friendly kite-marking programme Development of work experience toolkit Music entitlement programme Leading Edge professional development programme Creative Future Awards Gallery 37 summer school Mapping Creative Future model to national curriculum

  7. A Creative Future III: Revisited in 2013 in response to questions raised at the Youth Arts Summit and in collaboration with a wide range of partners, agencies, and young people from across the city Through a steering and sub-group process, the strategy reflects a shared vision for what cultural provision for children and young people in our city can and should be An extended framework from 0 25 years reflecting an increased focus on training and employability Aims to establish robust networks to enable meaningful dialogue and partnership working between schools and arts providers Considers the needs of young people from all backgrounds and gives them a voice in the planning of Birmingham s cultural provision

  8. The Creative Future steering group has established six strategic priorities and outlined a set of commitments which form a Creative Future pledge In order to deliver against these priorities and support effective communication with young people, a cross- sector, citywide action plan is needed Partners signing up to the Creative Future pledge are asked to identify how they currently support the strategy and to consider, within their business planning, which of their short, medium and long-term actions deliver against the six Creative Future priorities

  9. Strategic Commitments: The Creative Future Pledge All children and young people in Birmingham should have the opportunity to experience high quality arts and cultural provision as audience members, participants, creators and leaders All children and young people in Birmingham should have access to high quality cultural education in schools and other educational settings All children and young people in Birmingham should have access to and understanding of a clear progression pathway for deepening arts and cultural engagement from 0 - 25 years All children and young people in Birmingham should have access to high quality creative careers advice, education and guidance and support for accessing employment opportunities within the creative industries All children and young people in Birmingham should have the opportunity to achieve recognition and accreditation for their arts participation All children and young people should be able to have a voice in cultural planning and provision in Birmingham

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