The Creative Education Summit and the development of this compact marks a critical moment in reversing the years of prejudice and misguided decision-making that has denied a generation of access to creative education funding and opportunity, and systematically destroyed the talent pipeline into the cultural industries.
”As creative educators we are committed to delivering new equitable narratives and developing actions to foster equity, diversity and inclusion through policy, practice and pedagogy. The Creative Education Compact is a radical collaborative effort to connect around a common purpose, to share creative values across sectors and systems, to ensure widespread access to creative education and to break down barriers.” - Sandra Booth, Director of Policy and External Relations, Council for Higher Education in Art and Design (CHEAD)
“This group came together to address the decline of creative arts education in our schools, colleges and universities. Without decisive action from government, industry, and education creative education risks falling into the margins of the curriculum at the very time it is most needed. We believe that all learners deserve an excellent arts education. Our collective ambition is to secure equity of opportunity for all, a learner-centred, future-facing contemporary curriculum, supported by a valued, nurtured and diverse subject-specialist workforce.” - Michele Gregson, General Secretary/CEO, National Society for Education in Art and Design (NSEAD)
“It has never been a more critical time for the education sector to come together across the school, FE and HE sectors to ensure a joined up and truly accessible creative education pathway for young people, from early years through to HE and beyond. With the current lack of equity, visibility and access to arts, cultural and creative education across the whole educational ecology, particularly for those from underrepresented backgrounds, the Creative Education Summit offers a moment of catalyst which has the potential to unleash the nation’s creative power and the next generation’s talent, skills and hope.” - Lucy Kennedy, Chief Executive, National Saturday Club
“As CEO of University Alliance, whose members include Birmingham City University and many others who offer valuable opportunities to study creative subjects, I am delighted to see passionate representatives from a range of sectors able come together and deliver a plan of action through the development of a Creative Education Compact. The Compact not only sets out measures for the new government, but also outlines how we as sector representatives can take back control of creative education. Through this action we can ensure that generations to come can access high quality creative education as a basic right throughout their formative educational years.” - Vanessa Wilson, CEO University Alliance