Former England and Arsenal forward Kelly Smith says that seeing schoolgirls given the opportunity to play football she craved growing up gives her goosebumps. The Football Association (FA) has announced it has achieved its target of 90% of schools in England offering girls equal access to football in PE lessons three years early, exceeding its original target for 2028.
Since launching the Barclays Girls' Football in Schools network six years ago with just 3,000 participating schools, the FA now has over 20,000 schools signed up. According to the FA, a record-breaking 2.6 million girls now have equal access to football in PE lessons - an increase of 31% from the previous season.
The figure was instrumental in "shaping government discussions and driving policy change" following England's success at Euro 2022, when Lionesses boss Sarina Wiegman signed an open letter to then Conservative party leadership candidates Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak asking for every young girl to be able to play football at school.
However, the FA acknowledges there is still more work to be done. The governing body aims to increase schools offering equal opportunities through extra-curricular clubs from 83% to 90% by 2028, noting that many teenage girls drop out of team sports due to barriers like confidence and negative perceptions.
The FA credits its success in driving policy change for promoting greater equality in football. Former England and Arsenal striker Ian Wright said the focus was never on making girls the next Lionesses but about normalising girls playing football just like boys do, adding that "no girl should ever face barriers to playing football in school."
Since launching the Barclays Girls' Football in Schools network six years ago with just 3,000 participating schools, the FA now has over 20,000 schools signed up. According to the FA, a record-breaking 2.6 million girls now have equal access to football in PE lessons - an increase of 31% from the previous season.
The figure was instrumental in "shaping government discussions and driving policy change" following England's success at Euro 2022, when Lionesses boss Sarina Wiegman signed an open letter to then Conservative party leadership candidates Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak asking for every young girl to be able to play football at school.
However, the FA acknowledges there is still more work to be done. The governing body aims to increase schools offering equal opportunities through extra-curricular clubs from 83% to 90% by 2028, noting that many teenage girls drop out of team sports due to barriers like confidence and negative perceptions.
The FA credits its success in driving policy change for promoting greater equality in football. Former England and Arsenal striker Ian Wright said the focus was never on making girls the next Lionesses but about normalising girls playing football just like boys do, adding that "no girl should ever face barriers to playing football in school."