Tower Hamlets Summer University | |
Founded Date: | 1995 |
Founder: | Michael Young |
Location City: | London |
Location Country: | United Kingdom |
Location: | 24-26 Fournier Street, London E1 6QE |
Area Served: | United Kingdom |
Key People: | Executive Director: Sarah Davies Chair: Susie Meggitt Patron: A. Dee (Artful Dodger) Patron: Baroness Kennedy Patron: Deian Hopkin Patron: Benjamin Zephaniah Patron: Dame Marlene Robottom Patron: Gerard Lemos Patron: Yasmin Alibhai-Brown Patron: Dizzee Rascal |
Num Volunteers: | Approx. 200[1] |
Num Employees: | Approx. 25 |
Homepage: | futureversity.org |
Tower Hamlets Summer University (THSU) was a British charity in the Tower Hamlets area of London which offered independent learning programs for people from 11 to 25 years of age. It rebranded to the name Futureversity in 2010.
THSU ran short courses, typically two to five days long on a non-residential basis, which were provided free of charge to young people aged 11 to 25 across the borough of Tower Hamlets during school holidays. Courses covered subjects at a higher level than young students would normally be able to access, such as Careers in the City, The Trading Floor, Photography, Driving Theory, First Aid, Maths without Calculators, Jewellery Design and Making, Bollywood Dance, Film Making, Kick & Thai Boxing, Cricket, Tourism and Psychology.
Through one of the courses offered by THSU a magazine called Nang! was produced which promoted the work of THSU as well as giving a voice for young people involved in the courses.
Summer Uni London was a project commissioned to THSU by the Department for Education and Skills to develop other Summer Unis across London through training, support and resources.
A successful employment programme for unemployed 16- to 25-year-olds.
THSU promoted youth volunteering including (but not limited to) participating in the Nang! project, as a Summer Uni Peer, or by joining FAB.
Up to 40 volunteers (aged 16–25) volunteered to support the holiday programmes as Peer Motivators or Team Leaders.
The trustee board was informed by a Youth Advisory Group who represented the views of young people to the board. Two young people from this group also sat on the board of trustees.
Tower Hamlets Summer University was piloted in 1995 to help reduce youth crime in the borough during the summer holiday period. Since then, the charity has grown and inspired many other boroughs to pilot Summer Unis in London and across the UK
In 1993, Lord Young of Dartington commissioned a research project to find out why youth crime increased each summer. The research concluded with a number of recommendations regarding summer provision for young people in the borough.
In 1995, the Education Business Partnership and the borough invested time and money in piloting a programme of activities for 14- to 21-year-olds. This blue-print for Summer Uni was thoroughly documented with all results published in the autumn.
In 1996, two senior workers from the youth and arts sector (David Holloway OBE and Elizabeth Lynch) were seconded from the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, becoming the Directors of TH Summer University and established the Tower Hamlets programme and national roll-out. It was registered as a charity and company limited by guarantee ("Tower Hamlets Summer Education Ltd") in February of that year.
This pilot was additionally the blue print for the University of the First Age in 1996.
By 1997, Hackney, Brent, Newham, Islington and Southwark piloted their own programmes and in the next two years, other boroughs and other areas of the country followed suit. Funding from the Lottery and the New Opportunities Fund helped this momentum.
In 2006, Lord Andrew Adonis and the London Challenge team (part of the Department for Education and Skills) commissioned Tower Hamlets Summer University to roll out the model to every London borough. The young participants of Tower Hamlets Summer University chose to call this project 'Summer Uni London'. Summer Uni London was launched in June 2006.
In 2010, THSU and Summer Uni London rebranded as Futureversity to help represent the nationwide expansion goals of the charity.
In 2019 the charity decided to close its operations after several years of less successful fundraising. The logo, brand and programmes of the organisation were passed to the Essex based charity "Open Door" which then continued to provide holiday courses under the Futureversity brand, within the London Borough of Greenwich.