Sue Day portrait

Written by Sue Day

Sue Day MBE, Director of Women’s Football, the FA.

Despite huge progress in women and girls’ football over the past few years, too many girls still face invisible, but very real, barriers to taking part. Confidence, body image, misogyny, exclusion by boys, and gender stereotypes continue to shape girls’ experiences long before they reach the pitch.

That’s why The FA and Barclays, have launched Made for This Game: Breaking Barriers – a new suite of free, curriculum-linked educational resources designed specifically for primary and secondary schools. The aim is simple but urgent: to help teachers and pupils unpack the societal pressures that hold girls back, and to build environments where every young person feels they belong.

Why this matters for educators

Research continues to paint a stark picture:

  • Girls are 3.4 times more likely than boys to lack confidence in physical activity.
  • They are more than twice as likely to feel less resilient.
  • 71% of primary teachers say girls are held back by feeling excluded by boys.
  • By secondary school, body confidence and self-consciousness become the biggest barriers.

What the new resources offer

The Breaking Barriers resources are designed not only to empower girls, but to engage all pupils in understanding bias, stereotypes and inclusion.

  • Primary resources (Ages 5-11): Focused on misogyny, inclusion and challenging gender stereotypes. 
  • Secondary resources (Ages 11-16): Addressing more complex barriers, specifically body confidence and mental wellbeing, which are primary drivers for girls dropping out of sport during teenage years.

Central to the content are videos featuring CBBC and Strictly star Molly Rainford, who joins pupils in honest, age-appropriate conversations.

Support for teachers, too

A dedicated visual podcast for teachers also helps guide these conversations. Hosted by comedian and women’s football fan Maisie Adam, the episode brings together Lioness legend Rachel Brown-Finnis and Educating Yorkshire’s Matthew Burton to explore the wider societal challenges young people face and how teachers and adults can actively help by addressing these barriers to participation head on.

How you can get involved

These resources are free, ready to use, and flexible enough to fit into PSHE, assemblies, tutor time or PE.

Explore & download here: https://bit.ly/3NNvhIs 

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