Restless Development x Financial Times Writing Challenge

Education isn’t equal. 129 million girls are out of school worldwide. How does education need to change to help more girls stay in school?

Have your say. Young people around the world are invited to have their voices heard on the future of education, in a writing challenge from Restless Development and the Financial Times. 

Winning entries will be published in the Financial Times and We Are Restless – a chance to have your views read by thousands of people.

Applicants aged between 7-18 have until 7 May 2022 to submit answers to the question: 

How does education need to change to help more girls stay in school?

Entries are split into three age categories, each with a different word count:

  • Category A: Applicants between 7-12 years old are asked to submit their answer in three short paragraphs (max 300 words). Parents/guardians are asked to submit the applicant’s answer on their behalf.
  • Category B: Applicants between 13-15 years old are asked to submit their answer in 500 words. Parents/guardians are asked to submit the applicant’s answer on their behalf. 
  • Category C: Applicants between 16-18 years old: applicants are asked to submit their answer in up to 500 words. Applicants can submit their answers themselves.
  • Unfortunately we are only able to accept entries written in English. 

There are lots of barriers stopping women and girls from getting their education, and the pandemic is only making things worse. It is estimated over 20 million girls may not return to school. 

Your answer is a chance to share your ideas and solutions to help girls stay in school.  You may draw on your own experience of education, or the views of movements and organisations you have seen that are trying to improve education for young people, or anything else that inspires you to put pen to paper. 

Winners will be announced on 25 May 2022 and the best entries have the chance to be published on the Financial Times and the WeAreRestless blog. The winners will also be invited to share their answers with political leaders in the UK’s House of Lords in September 2022.

This writing challenge is part of Restless Development’s Power Up Appeal, which is raising money to help girls in Sierra Leone go to school, get their education and shape their own futures. Every pound given to the Power Up Appeal between 7 March and 6 June 2022 will be doubled by the UK Government. 

To enter, please visit the Restless Development website for more information.

Latest news

by Eeyeng Lim, Global Youth Mobilization Brussels, 9-10 October 2024  At the EU Global Gateway High-Level Youth Event last week, Global Youth Mobilization (GYM) Youth Representatives and Big Six Youth Organisations’ (Big Six) Representatives emphasized the significance of mobilizing young people in creating sustainable development in their local communities, through access to funding.   In the...
by Flor Cagliero, World Scouting Youth Representative 25 September 2024 The Global Youth Mobilization model provides funding and resources to enable meaningful youth engagement, along with mentorship, coaching, and capacity building support. The world’s six largest youth organisations, who lead the Global Youth Mobilization, held a high-level roundtable discussion on the sidelines of the 79th United...