Physical activity levels stagnate despite mounting evidence from sports councils, health organizations, charities, and think tanks showing its benefits for healthier, happier lives, better academic performance, workplace productivity, community connections, and crime prevention.
Coordination Gaps Hinder Progress
A recent House of Commons inquiry, Game On: Community and School Sport, calls for improved links between schools, sports clubs, community groups, parks, and playgrounds. Yet integration remains elusive.
Entrepreneur Mark Davies, former chair of British Rowing and Archery GB, champions connecting local schools and clubs. During Tracey Crouch’s tenure as sports minister from 2015 to 2018, this concept gained attention. Frustrated by delays, Davies launched The Big Map to facilitate direct connections and funding opportunities.
Innovative Regional Approaches
Nationally, sport and physical activity struggle to integrate with health, education, and community efforts. Greater Manchester’s Moving Partnership leads by uniting health, transport, urban design, and community services in a 10-year strategy backed by political leaders. Teams experiment, learn, and adapt to pioneer new solutions.
Systemic Barriers in Education and Health
Major shifts demand political vision beyond hosting events like the Olympics or World Cup. Education prioritizes individual subjects over holistic development, rendering physical education (PE) nearly optional. The Youth Sport Trust spotlights urgent needs for the Class of 2035.
The Centre for Social Justice’s Inactive Nation report exposes a health crisis among primary school children, advocating physical activity as central to school life. It recommends nationwide adoption of Bradford’s Creating Active Schools framework, which organizes school routines around movement.
The health system emphasizes treatment over prevention, including accessible sport. Social prescribing offers limited progress.
Enduring Impact of Negative School Experiences
A survey reveals over 4 million mid-lifers remain traumatized by school PE memories, with a similar number deterred from lifelong activity. Age UK’s Act Now, Age Better campaign underscores schooling’s lasting effects beyond academics, fueling calls to overhaul PE.
Many tall, uncoordinated teens, like a former elite rower, faced labels of being “unsporty” and avoided fields. Serendipitous university rowing introduced camaraderie, joy, learning, competition, and community support that endures decades later.
Shifting Focus to Positive Experiences
Participation alone fails; meaningful experiences sustain involvement. Too often, sport excludes those not fitting its mold, overlooking its role in school attendance, teen thriving, aging well, and crime diversion.
The sport for development sector, including the Alliance for Sport in Criminal Justice and Street Games, adapts activities to social challenges, measures real impacts, and transforms lives—offering models for policy and practice.

