The Week Junior is the must-have magazine to give your child a head start at school… and in life
Its fun-to-read pages are packed with stories they’ll love – news, nature, science and brain-boosting puzzles. Feed their love of learning with the UK’s best-selling current affairs magazine for kids – it’s like hiring a home tutor for just £2.61 a week!
Get your first 6 issues FREE, saving £21 on the shop price. Plus you'll also get our digital guide: Get ready to go back to school which will help your children get the new school year off to a positive start.
NEW! Choose from Print, Digital and Print & Digital formats.
6 issues free plus back-to-school guide
Take out a free trial worth £21 and we'll also send you a free digital guide: Get ready to go back to school which will help your children get the new school year off to a positive start.
‘Get ready to go back to school’ is packed with top tips to help your child get off to a great start this autumn – and go back to school brilliantly.
It will help your children to:
- Get organised - with tips on homework, planning the school route and a school bag checklist
- Boost their wellbeing - with advice on sleep and a healthy breakfast
- Prepare for the transition to a new school
I wish The Week Junior had been around when I was a kid - I’d have known so much more about the world in which I was growing up.
My granddaughter Rosamund dashes in from school on a Friday afternoon, grabs her latest copy of The Week Junior & disappears for the next 3 hours. She loves this magazine!
The Week Junior is brilliant! All the news, without the boring bits. Or at least with the boring bits made not boring.
Essential skills for educational success
Cultural Capital
‘Cultural capital’, defined by Ofsted as ‘the essential knowledge that children need to be educated citizens’, is needed for children to succeed at a broad range of studies by the time they reach GCSE level. The Week Junior provides a solid, well-researched and broad offering of cultural capital, ensuring its readers – with the help of their parents – are in the best possible position to become well-educated citizens of the world.
Reading and Literacy
Even reluctant readers will find The Week Junior’s short, engaging articles digestible and enjoyable and will find themselves reading the whole magazine in a fraction of time they would finish a book; a great confidence boost whilst improving language and communication skills. Using the articles as a start point for discussions and debates at home is also an excellent way of improving children’s oracy – essential for personal and academic expression.
Skills for Learning
Being able to read and understand non-fiction texts is an essential skill for learners, one that will be relied upon throughout their education. Reading quality children’s journalism, such as The Week Junior, gives children an excellent point of reference when being asked to write articles, newspaper articles, leaflets, and instructions – all of which will be expected at some stage of their education.
Curriculum-Linked Content
The Week Junior includes a wide range of topics and features that link to the curriculum, including world geography, STEM, sport, creative industries, climate change, politics and democracy, literature, equality, history, as well as wellbeing support, too. Children will find something useful, interesting, and inspiring in The Week Junior for almost every homework project imaginable.