ABOUT XLP: In 1996, in response to a stabbing in a school playground, the school’s headmaster asked Patrick Regan, a local church based youth worker, to come into the school and work with their students and teachers to help with difficult behavioural issues. This was the beginning of XLP, a Christian charity that has an emphasis on being faith-based, but not faith-biased: XLP works equally with young people of all faiths and none. Those who work at XLP share a common passion: to serve the community by meeting the social, educational and behavioural needs of young people, and empowering them to make wise lifestyle choices and to realise their potential |
ABOUT THE FOUNDER: Patrick Regan has travelled to over thirty countries working with and on behalf of some of the poorest communities. His passion is to see children and young people, from the most deprived and challenging backgrounds, succeed in life - helping them to avoid making wrong choices and to overcome the challenges they face - to realise their amazing potential. To do this he has engaged with politicians and gang members, victims and perpetrators, police, councils and housing associations, and most particularly with the young people themselves and their families. Patrick founded the charity, XLP, that today is committed to fighting poverty, supporting education and serving hundreds of young people and their families weekly in inner London. He is also the author of two books the latest being Fighting Chance tackling Britians Gang culture and is on the advisory board of the Centre for Social Justice. Patrick lives with his wife and three children in South-east London.
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Over the years XLP has grown from working in a single school to operating in over 60 schools and communities across Southwark, Lewisham, Greenwich,Tower Hamlets, Newham, Islington and Camden. In the early days, Patrick began by hosting a lunch-time club on school premises that taught the kids more about their own heroes, and in particular how those heroes behaved. Today, on a day-to-day basis, XLP has projects dealing with a wide variety of issues including drugs awareness, anger management and violence, poverty and fairtrade, prejudice and racism, sex and relationships, and image and identity. |
Whilst much of the work is based in the schools, XLP also works on a number of estates using both community facilities and XLP's own double-decker bus facility that has computer equipment for homework support upstairs, and a youth “chill” space downstairs. XLP has also grown an Arts Showcase programme that is focused on encouraging pupils, especially those who for various reasons struggle academically, to express themselves in their own unique way through dance, comedy, drama, rap and singing. This arts programme, whose primary focus is on ’showcase’ and not ’competition’, encourages these pupils and aims to raise their self-esteem, the sense of their own potential, and help them to set goals and work hard to achieve them. Running throughout the year with the assistance and coaching of the schools' arts and music departments and the XLP team, pupils enter the XLP showcase school auditions. The best acts then participate in a borough final, the winners of which then enter an inter-borough final. Family, friends, teachers and peers are encouraged to come and see just what their young people can do. XLP operates a number of other initiatives including a mentoring project, sports activities and even summer camps that take young people who live on estates in London to live under canvas for a week in the summer in Dorset. |
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XLP’s staff and student volunteers constantly confront many of the issues facing young people in our communities today, such as bullying and intimidation, weapons, boredom due to a lack of organised activities, absence of parents, and living in areas with high crime rates. All XLP staff and volunteers have enhanced CRB disclosures and work within strict child protection guidelines. For over a decade, XLP has witnessed positive stories of young people whose futures have changed from going nowhere to having hope and purpose. These stories rarely get aired but are the fuel that keeps the vision alive. |
Conspiracy of the Insignificant If you are interested in the history of XLP, or reading some of the stories and lessons learned on the journey so far, then why not read Patrick's book 'Conspiracy of the Insignificant'. |
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