Almost Half Of Teenage Girls Are Put Off School Sport Because Of Their PE Kit

PE Kit Sucks So Bad It's Actually Putting Girls Off Sport

No one expects their PE kit to look like its been designed by Stella McCartney (if only!) but it turns out the new generation of young women are less enamoured with polo shirts and matchy-matchy gym knickers than even we were.

New research shows many girls are put off of sport at school because of the clothes they have to wear whle doing it.

Research carried out by Virgin Active to support its Active Inspiration campaign has shown that 39% of girls, rising to 46% among 16-year-olds, say they enjoy being active but hate the PE kit.

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To tackle the problem, Active Inspiration campaign partners the Women’s Sport and Fitness Foundation (WSFF) and Virgin Active have teamed up with leading designer Lexie Sport and a group of girls from Isle of Portland Aldridge Academy, where PE kit has been a barrier to girls taking part in physical activity.

The girls were challenged by Lexie Sport founder Lily Rice to create their perfect PE kit, before choosing a winning design by 13-year old Emily Marshall.

Marshall, 13, who created the winning design, commented: “I enjoy exercise and know it is good for me but sometimes school PE kit made me feel very self-conscious.

"It was really exciting to have the opportunity to design my perfect PE kit. I hope that schools look at the findings of our work with the Active Inspiration campaign to encourage more girls to live active lifestyles.”

Her comments were backed up by other pupils who took part in the campaign. One girl said: “My PE kit’s uncomfortable and a little bit small – I don’t like myself in it.”

Another said: “If you’ve got something you don’t like wearing, or you think doesn’t look nice, you don’t really want to do any sport in it.”

The project demonstrated that simply changing the traditional PE kit, with low-cut V-necked polo shirts, unflattering skirts or uncomfortable materials to more modern leggings, high-necked collars and dark colours that hide sweat patches could have a major impact in driving higher engagement with PE in school, and in turn help to foster active lifestyles among young girls.

Youth inactivity is a major problem in the UK, particularly among girls. Four-in-ten (39%) 16-year-old girls never take any strenuous activity in school. Almost half (48%) say they have made excuses to try to get out of PE lessons.

The Active Inspiration campaign aims to enable 500,000 young people to embrace activeness over the next five years.

To help meet that target, Virgin Active and its campaign partners will be sharing the findings with policymakers and kit manufacturers to encourage others to ensure that PE kit does not act as a barrier to youth participation in physical activity.

When trialling the kit made by Lexie Sport, one girl said: “You just feel more confident about your body and I think that’s really important at this age because you don’t want to be worrying about what other people are thinking of you while you’re working out.”

Managing Director of Virgin Active, Matt Merrick, said: “It is immensely rewarding to be able to give the young girls a say in how best to tackle the problem of youth inactivity.

"However, both we and our partners in the Active Inspiration campaign are clear that this winning PE kit design is just the starting point, showing what makes girls feel confident.

"Virgin Active is now calling for schools, politicians and PE kit manufacturers to listen to these findings and consider incorporating them into the PE kits of the future, so that more young girls feel engaged with being active in their everyday lives.”

Rob Russell, Head of Campus at Isle of Portland Aldridge Community Academy, has committed to acting on the work started by pupils at his school.

“The new PE kit looks great. I’m proud of our pupils for not only creating these designs, but also for sharing their insight on how PE kit can be a barrier preventing young girls taking part in sport.

“As a school we will be acting on these findings to encourage more of the girls to reap the benefits of an active lifestyle.

"In consultation with parents, we will be looking to amend our uniform rules over the coming months to allow pupils more freedom of choice over their PE kit,” he said.

Founder of Lexie Sport, Lily Rice, said: “Emily’s winning PE kit is a great piece of design that responds directly to the girls’ insights about how PE kit can be a barrier to participating in sport.

“I’ve always taken part in sport but I could never find the kit I wanted. This inspired me to start a women’s sport brand that makes clothes that women can feel confident in."

Ruth Holdaway, CEO, Women Sport and Fitness Foundation, said: “It is our mission to transform sport for the benefit of every woman and girl in the UK.

"Our research and insight tells us that while girls do want to be active, they have very different needs to boys. This project not only highlights one of those key differences, but also delivers a clear and simple solution for schools and parents.”

8 Inspirational Women In Sport
Sarah Attar, Saudi Arabian athlete(01 of08)
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Her position in the women's 800m heats may have been a distant last but it was a 'first' that prompted a standing ovation from the crowd. Atturst bravely challenged the social conventions of her country to become the first Saudi Arabian woman to compete in the Olympic track and field. So while Sarah Attar didn't win a medal, she did realise her dream - to represent the women of her country and inspire them to embrace sport.She said: "For women in Saudi Arabia, I think this can really spark something to get more involved in sports, to become more athletic," she said. "Maybe in the next Olympics, we can have a very strong team to come."Atturst, along with judo competitor, Wojdan Ali Seraj Abdulrahim Shahrkhani, were the first Saudi Arabian women to attend the Olympics.The decision was a last-minute one following pressure from the International Olympic Committee. (credit:PA)
Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, Campaigner (02 of08)
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Former Paralympian medalist, Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, 43, is world-renowned for her tireless campaigning for disabled sport as well as women's sport.Born with spina bifida, the former athlete was enobled in 2010, after winning 11 gold medals across five consecutive Paralympics Games.Since retiring from sport, Grey-Thompson is busier than ever - she is a TV broadcaster, politician, sits on the board for London Transport and the London Marathon and is the patron for numerous charities. She is never afraid to speak out on what she believes in. Most recently, in May 2013, she told the House of Commons Education Committee that the Government did not take sport seriously and that many disabled children were still “sent to the library” during PE lessons because “teachers don’t feel equipped or able, in many cases to integrate them properly into lessons.”“We are trying to save money because of tough economic times. The obesity bill is just going to keep rising, welfare benefits will just keep rising and, actually, sport [and] physical activity can do an awful lot to challenge and help those things.” (credit:Getty Images)
Clare Balding, Broadcaster & Writer(03 of08)
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Clare Balding's incredible coverage of London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics cemented her status as a national treasure and earned her a BAFTA Special Award. It also helped to raise the profile of women in sport as well as women in the media.Balding, whose passion for sport is in her genes (her father is the Queen's former horse trainer), has a particular passion for women's sport and in her frequent interviews in the media, she never misses an opportunity to campaign for gender equality.Not surprisingly, Balding was given an OBE in June this year. (credit:Alamy)
Marion Bartoli, Wimbledon Champion(04 of08)
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Unfortunately, Marion Bartoli's impressive victory in the 2013 Wimbledon final - in which she didn't drop a set against Germany's Sabine Lasicki - was somewhat overshadowed by *those* sexist remarks from John Inverdale and a few ignorant souls on Twitter.The fiasco has forced the world to open its eyes to the sexism that women still have to contend with. Meanwhile, Bartoli's dignified and magnanimous reaction has cast her as not only a sporting champion but an admirable role model. (credit:Alamy)
Jessica Ennis-Hill, Olympic Heptathlete(05 of08)
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Labelled the poster girl of 2012, Jessica Ennis’ 'girl-next-door to Olympic gold-medalist' fairytale has given a nation of schoolgirls a reason to believe that dreams really can come true.Smashing her personal best, beating her competitors by hundreds of points and scooping the gold medal for the heptathlon, Ennis-Hill, has a great deal to be proud of. But it is her status as a role model that seems to give the athlete her greatest sense of achievement.Recognising the importance of such role models, she said after the Olympics: “You can have lots of regulations and lots of information booklets, to get females involved in sport. But if you want girls to play sport, you have to give them role models.” However she is also aware of the obstacles: “The problem with the traditional non-sporting women in the media is that most of them are size zero. You can’t be a fit, healthy sportswoman – out there beating your rivals – if you’re size zero.“It’s hard to change but it would happen if more sportswomen were in the media, and if more coaches were women, more influential sports figures were women.” (credit:Alamy)
Sue Tibballs, CEO, Women's Sport And Fitness Foundation(06 of08)
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Tibballs, a tireless campaigner for gender equality. As the Chair of the Women's Sport And Fitness Foundation, Tibballs aim is to create a nation of active women. Her latest campaign is to target the issue around women and fitness at grass-roots level by recruiting 25 schools for an in-depth analysis of how schools engage with girls to deliver physical education and to establish the perfect model.Tiball believes that body confidence is the biggest obstacle for women and sport. She told HuffPost Lifestyle: "The relationship women have with their bodies and the confidence surrounding that is the last step of women's liberation".She believe that "girls need to own their bodies and move their bodies" and have the confidence to get involved with sport. That involves removing the negative perceptions around exercise and fitness for girls. And she believes a crucial part of that is a greater exposure to sporting role models in the media. (credit:PA)
Hope Powell, England Women's National Coach(07 of08)
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Growing up in South-East London in the 1970s, in a world there was no place for women in football, Hope Powell stuck by her guns and challenged conventions, determined to realise her dreams.While studying to be a football coach, she knew she had a greater challenge ahead than the rest of her classmates but she wasn't deterred: "On the course I was the only female, the only black female and there I was with these guys from the professional world of football. I probably worked harder than everyone else; in that situation you’ve got more to prove."But prove herself she did. Though "disgusted" that she was unable to play football professionally in this country, she has forged an alternative career in football as the England Women's National Coach and the Team GB Olympic football team.She is currently leading the England team in the Women's Euro 2013.In 2003 Powell became the first woman to achieve the UEFA Pro Licence—the highest coaching award available. (credit:PA)
Nicola Adams, Boxing Champion(08 of08)
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Nicola Adams became the first ever Olympic boxing champion when she scooped the gold for Team GB in 2012.Proving that boxing is every bit a woman's game, the champion's victory has caused a dramatic surge of interest in female boxing.Sport England figures show that before last summer's Games, where women's boxing was included for the first time, there were 19,600 females boxing once a week, compared with 35,100 now - an increase of 79%. (credit:Alamy)