Channel 4 Learning

Channel 4 Learning is an education company based in London, England. The company markets education resources, games and activities to primary and secondary schools across the United Kingdom. It is wholly owned by Espresso Group Ltd.

Channel 4 Learning
Private/Limited
IndustryPublishing
FoundedApril 2007
Headquarters,
Area served
United Kingdom
ProductsWeb content, DVD and CD-ROM
OwnerEspresso Group Ltd.
Websitewww.channel4learning.com

History

Channel 4 Learning, originally part of Channel 4, was created to produce support materials that motivate and inspire learners aged 4–19 while empowering teachers to create engaging lessons.

Primary resources cover Early Years, Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2. Secondary resources cover Key Stage 3, Key Stage 4 and GCSEs.

In October 2007, Channel 4 launched Learning Clipbank, an online service specifically for secondary schools in the UK, providing video clips across 16 subject areas with tools to assist teachers and students in using the content. While most of the video was originally sourced from Channel 4 television programmes, it has since been supplemented with content from ITN and BBC Motion Gallery.

Channel 4 Learning also has an International division that license and distributes the rights to over 320 hours of educational programming, commissioned by Channel 4, into more than 40 countries worldwide.

After the re-structuring of Channel 4 in 1993, ITV's obligations to provide educational programming on Channel 4's airtime passed to Channel 4 itself, and the new service became Channel 4 Schools, with the new corporation administering the service and commissioning its programmes, some still from ITV, others from independent production.[1][2]

In 2000, the service was renamed 4Learning and in April 2007, the commercial arm and rights exploitation of its programmes and support materials was sold to Espresso Education and renamed Channel 4 Learning.[3]

gollark: I don't think UK curricula cover them until A level.
gollark: Or... actually in most countries that I know of.
gollark: Not here!
gollark: I mean, I can conveniently manage services with simple commands, unit file syntax means I can ACTUALLY WRITE SERVICES, it lets me specify dependencies, it's easy to add sandboxing via something something namespaces to a service, and `journalctl`'s pretty great.
gollark: As much as I don't like systemd's overintegration it actually *is* very good?

References

  1. "schoolsTV.com - CHANNEL 4 SCHOOLS: 1993-1997 HISTORY". Archived from the original on 2007-07-05. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
  2. schoolsTV.com History of ITV Schools on Channel 4. Retrieved at the Internet Archive on 16 Feb 2008
  3. Allen, Katie (2007-03-26). "Channel 4 Learning ready for a shot of Espresso". London: The Guardian.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.