There he is, out and about, being a good man again. Ed Sheeran is leading a charge. Last week, he visited schools and youth groups in Coventry, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast to promote music education. His Ed Sheeran Foundation is advocating for the “essential role” of music teachers in young peoples’ lives. He wants to improve access to instruments and lessons for 12,000 children. This goes from grassroots organisations to state education.
It is a brilliant campaign. Sheeran, time and again, proves himself to be somebody who puts his (considerable) money where his mouth is. He is worthy of support and praise for this.
It’s not a surprise that state education needs some help. The funding issues are well known. Every school across the country will be able to detail financial gaps that need filling.
- Ed Sheeran: ‘I did everything I should’ve done. And everything I shouldn’t’
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- Jamie Oliver: ‘The power of democracy is measured by how we treat those at risk’
But the ongoing part that familiar faces play in meeting these needs continues to surface unresolved questions about the entirety of state education funding. And also about what else is missing in wider community support that schools are then, by default, expected to step in to fix.
Twenty years ago, Jamie Oliver started working to improve school dinners. He was not trying to reset the Earth on its axis. He simply wanted to get healthier meals into schools. Many schools were trying to get the most they could for the least they pay – (it was frequently tied to local authority outsourcing). As a result, they cared less and less about healthy meals.
The campaign, remember, found its lightening rod in Turkey Twizzlers – very little turkey, an awful lot of twizz. Oliver believed that a healthy meal gave the child a better chance of having a healthy mind, and future. He got the Twizzlers off the menu. He said he still gets abuse for it. It became about class – how dare he, a millionaire, stop folk eating what they want, ran the argument.