Holyrood, made browsable

Hansard

Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

129
Current MSPs
415
MSPs ever elected
13
Parties on record
2,355,091
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
Coverage span
Official Report

Search Hansard contributions

Clear
Showing 0 of 2,355,091 contributions in session S6, 16 Apr 2026 – 16 May 2026. Latest 30 days: 148. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 14 May 2026.

No contributions match those filters.

← Back to list
Committee

Education, Children and Young People Committee 18 March 2026 [Draft]

18 Mar 2026 · S6 · Education, Children and Young People Committee
Item of business
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Mark Williams Watch on SPTV
Ours is a different model, but it has similar outcomes. Sport and creative activity are our main hook—they are the gateway to engagement. What some people call trusted adults we call good adults. A key theme is having the right people in the right place doing the right thing with the right kids.We see the benefits. The easier ones are improved physical and mental wellbeing, in which we see huge differences. We use a tool called the SHANARRI—safe, healthy, achieving, nurtured, active, respected, responsible and included—wheel. Not everyone is familiar with it, but I am sure that committee members probably are. It measures mental wellbeing in young people. I will try to break down how it does that.Imagine a pizza cut up into slices, with each slice a letter on the SHANARRI wheel: “S”, “H”, “A” and so on. We ask our young people to complete three wheels: one for how they feel at school; one for how they feel at home; and one for how they feel on our programmes. On average, our programmes finish above both school and home, in particular with regard to how safe the young people feel. They even feel that they achieved more at our programmes than they did at school. They feel respected and included, which are massive drivers. I mentioned the numbers that show how much antisocial behaviour has reduced. That is fantastic, and it is great for the community, but our programmes make young people mentally and physically stronger. That is the effect that they have.The provision of safe and trusted environments is key. Every young person should feel safe in their environment, whether at home, in school or in the community. That is an area in which we do a lot of work. We have introduced Cruyff courts. They belong to the community—they are not ours or the council’s. The provision of such facilities makes a big difference. We have three in the city at the moment. They enable young people of all different ages and all different stages to achieve different outcomes.We are working with Robert Gordon University, which has provided a research fellow for three years to measure the impact of a free-to-access sport facility in a disadvantaged community. The outcomes are already proving what we say in the reports and the evidence.Our work helps to strengthen relationships at home. If the kids achieve and are able to move on to more positive destinations, that leads to a happier home life. There is less stress, less pressure, less push and fewer arguments, and there is more rounded family cohesion.Our work helps to divert young people from antisocial behaviour. As I touched on earlier, we know that, when we operate, there is less antisocial behaviour in the community.There is also the issue of pathways and aspirations. “What next?” and “Where do we go from here?” are key questions for young people. They can start to think about what they want and how we can help. That is what our programmes do for families and young people.

In the same item of business

The Convener (Douglas Ross) Con
Good morning, and welcome to the 11th meeting of the Education, Children and Young People Committee in 2026. This morning, we will be taking evidence on comm...
Mark Williams (Denis Law Legacy Trust)
Thank you for inviting me to the committee. I am from the Denis Law Legacy Trust, which is a small children’s charity that is based in Aberdeen. We specialis...
The Convener Con
That is excellent. That is the type of information that we want, so we are grateful for that evidence. Ms McCulloch, we come to you.
Debbi McCulloch (Spartans Community Foundation)
Thank you for inviting me along this morning. I have worked at the Spartans Community Foundation since 2009. We opened our doors in north Edinburgh in Decemb...
The Convener Con
Please do not apologise. It is very inspiring to hear what you both are speaking about. My next question is on what you are doing in your localities. What is...
Mark Williams
It obviously very different for us because we are not part of the SFA or have a football club connection. Obviously Denis Law has a huge connection there but...
Debbi McCulloch
Numerous clubs across Scotland are doing fantastic work through their foundations in similar areas as us—Falkirk, Hibs, Hearts, Morton, to name a few.First, ...
The Convener Con
That gives us a good start and takes us in the direction that a lot of fellow committee members’ questions will follow.
Jackie Dunbar (Aberdeen Donside) (SNP) SNP
Good morning. Thank you very much for taking the time to come along. As the Aberdeen Donside MSP, I absolutely know the benefits that the Denis Law Legacy Tr...
Debbi McCulloch
Last year, we asked young people who access our youth work programmes whether they felt that they had a trusted adult at Spartans, and 94 per cent of them sa...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
Do you mean in Spartans or outwith it?
Debbi McCulloch
With regard to the employment opportunities?
Jackie Dunbar SNP
Yes.
Debbi McCulloch
Definitely in Spartans. We have employment and volunteering opportunities, and young people who have started with us at nine years old are now near enough 25...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
I put the same question to Mark.
Mark Williams
Ours is a different model, but it has similar outcomes. Sport and creative activity are our main hook—they are the gateway to engagement. What some people ca...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
Your volunteers are absolutely key to everything that you do. How many of your volunteers attended your sessions as bairns and have come back?
Mark Williams
I love that question. Volunteers are the spine of our organisation, as they are with most voluntary organisations. They are massively important. We spent a l...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
I will be honest—I did not expect the figure to be 60 per cent. That is a large number. I often see on your Facebook page pictures of certificates being hand...
Mark Williams
I think that, last year, it was just under 5,000, which is a huge number. We do employ a volunteer officer, because, when it comes to volunteers, what we cal...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
Okay, thank you. Debbi, do you want to comment?
Debbi McCulloch
Last year, our organisation was awarded the King’s award for voluntary services. The majority of our volunteers are involved in the football club side of thi...
Jackie Dunbar SNP
I believe in bigging up successes. That is why I was asking.
Debbi McCulloch
More than 150 girls and 400 boys play at the club on a regular basis. Those teams would not go ahead, and that level of physical activity, social engagement ...
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
I visited the Community Trade Hub in Leven recently. Debbi, you were talking about the way that you treat young people and the relationship that you have wit...
Debbi McCulloch
The alternative school model is for children who will not really be attending school outwith that. They have the opportunity to come to Spartans for two and ...
Willie Rennie LD
The second point was about funding. The Community Trade Hub seems to be able to scrape together different pockets of money, mostly pupil equity funding, but ...
Debbi McCulloch
Yes: it will be PEF, as well as strategic equity funding—SEF. It is very much up to the schools how they distribute that.Our senior alternative school costs ...
Mark Williams
Your first question was about increased attendance. We wanted that to happen, which was why we introduced Denis Law’s academy. We wanted young people to feel...
Willie Rennie LD
Do you both feel that your operations are properly evaluated by the local authorities and that that is accepted by their leadership as being properly validat...