Rainbow Club – UK

Charity:
AFRIL

Action for Refugees in Lewisham improves the educational attainment, confidence and aspirations of asylum seeking, refugee and migrant children.

Country

UK

Start Year:

2024

Run Time:

3 years

Participant Age:

5-11

Which UN SDGs?

Please select listing to show.

“Extra curriculum activities and social experience for my child, a kind of sense of belonging” 

AFRIL parent

What is Co-Funding?

Co-funding with the ALMT allows individuals, other Trusts and Foundations, and Companies to contribute funds directly to individual, vetted and approved, project partnerships. With fifteen years of experience awarding grants and working in partnership with children’s organisations around the world, the ALMT is best placed to support you in your philanthropy.

Rainbow Club is a supplementary Saturday school for asylum seeking, refugee and vulnerable migrant children in Southeast London. The majority of Rainbow Club parents are unemployed and living in poverty with 66% having no settled housing. Living in a stressful and unstable home environment has a significant impact on displaced children’s
educational attainment, opportunities, confidence and wellbeing.

AFRIL’s Saturday school provides 38 weeks of specialist English and Maths tuition, alongside creative activities, sports, and wellbeing support and last year supported 119 primary age children. In addition, it provides school trips, holiday workshops and youth volunteering opportunities. By GCSE age, Refugee and asylum-seeking children are estimated to be 15.5 months behind non-migrant children in English and Maths GCSEs, and therefore, early intervention during the primary years has a pivotal role to play in reducing the gap.

On registration, 39% of children spoke little/no English, representing 19 different nationalities and 10 home languages. Notable nationalities are Syria, Afghanistan and Nigeria, with a minority of children from Sudan, Albania, Kuwait, Ukraine and Sri Lanka. Families also have access to AFRIL’s other services: Advice and Advocacy; Foodbank and
Destitution; and Immigration.

Classes are delivered by highly experienced teachers with their own lived experience of migration, and supported by trained volunteer teaching assistants, who provide dedicated one-to-one support for children most in need. Rainbow Club has been awarded the Quality Mark by the National Resource Centre for Supplementary Education and last year achieved School of Sanctuary status.

AFRIL will continue to embed and develop their Youth Council thereby increasing young peoples’ participation, enhance the literacy programme and widen young people’s horizons
through building on local partnerships.

Related Projects

Alsama Project offers a world class education for young refugees

The Ben Kinsella Trust is a charity that tackles knife crime through education and campaigning.

The Theatre Shed is an inclusive theatre company empowering young people to embrace their unique voices, fostering confidence and self-expression.

Salmon Youth Centre aims to help build the confidence, skills and independence of young people with disabilities and to increase their access to opportunities.

The Angus Lawson Memorial Trust
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.