1 hr 12 min

077: Stuart Worden of the Brit School on performance environments Supporting Champions

    • Self-Improvement

This week’s guest is Stuart Worden, Principal of the Brit School. The BRIT (British Record Industry Trust) School is a performing arts and technology school in Croydon, South London and free to attend. But this is no ordinary performing arts school. The alumni read like a who’s who of music, dance, film and production;
Singers - Adele, The Feeling, Leona Lewis, Katie Melua, Jessie J, 
Actors - Cush Jumbo, Tom Holland, Cleve September, 
Dancers - Twist and Pulse, 
Youtube comedians - Percelle Ascot, Joivan Wade
Many more students come through the school who we wouldn’t know, but are the people that set the lighting for concerts or stage shows, write poetry that maybe we haven’t yet read or adapt screen plays that we have yet seen.
So how does a performing arts school support the talent that comes through its doors? How do the school teachers select people to attend? 
In this discussion with Stuart, he shares the values, philosophies, challenges that he and many of the incredibly talented teachers create. What lies at the centre of the discussion that you’ll hear is about environment and how the very sense of a place and what it lives for how it feels - can be a force for the development of incredible performance and people who want to make a difference in this world.
This all against a backdrop of the arts being profoundly undervalued in educational systems around the world and under great threat during the restrictions on gatherings with the coronavirus pandemic.
Stuart has such passion and conviction, his approach seemed to me to be deeply caring about how we should support young people. I found his outlook and insights enriching, as I could feel my worldview being enhanced with every answer he gave. By the end of the discussion I was genuinely enlightened. 
 
Notes
How well the students have responded to the strange times
Exploring specialisation or exploring the whole creative process
The process of applying to joining the Brit School
Artists fundamentally need to be able to display empathy
The importance of activism
What do the Brit School look for in people?
Working hard and realism
Advocacy and mentoring of students
How non-uniform reduces barriers
Rules and regulations
Alumni such as Tom Holland, Tuwaine Barrett enjoy returning and meeting the current students 
The Alumni of the Brit school and how they still contribute to the school
The destination and results are not as interesting as the journey
Stuart’s ambitions for the Brit School and the future
 
Links
https://twitter.com/Stuartworden
https://twitter.com/TheBRITSchool
https://www.instagram.com/thebritschool/
Contribute to the school
https://cafdonate.cafonline.org/11242
 
Steve Ingham on Twitter www.twitter.com/ingham_steve
Supporting Champions on;
Twitter www.twitter.com/support_champs
Linkedin, www.linkedin.com/company/supporting-champions
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/supportingchampions
If you’re looking for some coaching support or some virtual team development help to support you to get to the next level in work, life or sport then take a look at https://supportingchampions.co.uk/coaching-mentoring/
or drop us a note at enquiries@supportingchampions.co.uk then you can sign up for a free consultation to explore which package is right for you.
If you’re ambitious to work in sports performance, and you realise that there’s no golden ticket to the chocolate factory – that you have to learn and develop and build a network of collaborators to get there – then sign up for our Graduate Membership today – go to http://supportingchampions.co.uk/membership/ and enrol. We’ll look forward to connecting with you there.
 

This week’s guest is Stuart Worden, Principal of the Brit School. The BRIT (British Record Industry Trust) School is a performing arts and technology school in Croydon, South London and free to attend. But this is no ordinary performing arts school. The alumni read like a who’s who of music, dance, film and production;
Singers - Adele, The Feeling, Leona Lewis, Katie Melua, Jessie J, 
Actors - Cush Jumbo, Tom Holland, Cleve September, 
Dancers - Twist and Pulse, 
Youtube comedians - Percelle Ascot, Joivan Wade
Many more students come through the school who we wouldn’t know, but are the people that set the lighting for concerts or stage shows, write poetry that maybe we haven’t yet read or adapt screen plays that we have yet seen.
So how does a performing arts school support the talent that comes through its doors? How do the school teachers select people to attend? 
In this discussion with Stuart, he shares the values, philosophies, challenges that he and many of the incredibly talented teachers create. What lies at the centre of the discussion that you’ll hear is about environment and how the very sense of a place and what it lives for how it feels - can be a force for the development of incredible performance and people who want to make a difference in this world.
This all against a backdrop of the arts being profoundly undervalued in educational systems around the world and under great threat during the restrictions on gatherings with the coronavirus pandemic.
Stuart has such passion and conviction, his approach seemed to me to be deeply caring about how we should support young people. I found his outlook and insights enriching, as I could feel my worldview being enhanced with every answer he gave. By the end of the discussion I was genuinely enlightened. 
 
Notes
How well the students have responded to the strange times
Exploring specialisation or exploring the whole creative process
The process of applying to joining the Brit School
Artists fundamentally need to be able to display empathy
The importance of activism
What do the Brit School look for in people?
Working hard and realism
Advocacy and mentoring of students
How non-uniform reduces barriers
Rules and regulations
Alumni such as Tom Holland, Tuwaine Barrett enjoy returning and meeting the current students 
The Alumni of the Brit school and how they still contribute to the school
The destination and results are not as interesting as the journey
Stuart’s ambitions for the Brit School and the future
 
Links
https://twitter.com/Stuartworden
https://twitter.com/TheBRITSchool
https://www.instagram.com/thebritschool/
Contribute to the school
https://cafdonate.cafonline.org/11242
 
Steve Ingham on Twitter www.twitter.com/ingham_steve
Supporting Champions on;
Twitter www.twitter.com/support_champs
Linkedin, www.linkedin.com/company/supporting-champions
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/supportingchampions
If you’re looking for some coaching support or some virtual team development help to support you to get to the next level in work, life or sport then take a look at https://supportingchampions.co.uk/coaching-mentoring/
or drop us a note at enquiries@supportingchampions.co.uk then you can sign up for a free consultation to explore which package is right for you.
If you’re ambitious to work in sports performance, and you realise that there’s no golden ticket to the chocolate factory – that you have to learn and develop and build a network of collaborators to get there – then sign up for our Graduate Membership today – go to http://supportingchampions.co.uk/membership/ and enrol. We’ll look forward to connecting with you there.
 

1 hr 12 min