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The Day (website)

The Day
TypeChildren's daily online newspaper
Founder(s)Richard Addis
Founded2011
LanguageEnglish
CountryUnited Kingdom
Websitehttps://theday.co.uk
The Day's founder, Richard Addis, with winners of the Global Young Journalist award.

Since 2011 The Day has been turning news into lessons and is recognised for its integrity, balance and quality. Today it is a leading provider of life skills resources and training for teachers in both primary and secondary schools.

It has a paying readership of 900 schools using digital subscriptions to teach nearly 1m students per day -- the largest audience of any news brand in the UK in its age group. Its content was endorsed by the UK’s Department for Education during the Covid epidemic. It is independent of all media groups and writes all its own content.

The website was founded in 2011 by the British journalist Richard Addis.[1]

The first story was published on 6 January 2011, titled "Terrible floods in Australia bring ruin and snakes".

In 2015, The Day launched its sister publication, News Detectives, (formerly The Day Explorer) a daily mini-newspaper for primary school students. The first story was published on 13 April, titled "Cornish people declared a national minority".

The Day partners with the LEGO Group on Build the Change Tuesdays, getting students to come up with creative solutions to the sustainability challenges affecting our planet.

It also partners with the University of Oxford on a major response to the growing youth mental health crisis, BrainWaves[1].

In July 2020, the website apologised and paid an undisclosed amount to author JK Rowling for an article that implied that she was transphobic and should be boycotted.[2]

In 2021, The Day became a business signatory on the National Literacy Trust's "Vision for Literacy" pledge.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Guttenplan, DD, (2013-06-23), New York Times. Explaining the issues behind the news
  2. ^ Waterson, Jim (23 July 2020). "Children's news website apologises to JK Rowling over trans tweet row". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
[edit]


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The Day (website)
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