Nikki Edwards is a lawyer and mediator who has grown a social community This E17 Life, where she shares her projects and passions. She has a young family and wants them to grow up understanding what is going on in the wider world as well as their own small part of it. She has recently introduced The Week Junior to her eldest child who is almost seven, to introduce him to the joy of having a magazine arrive weekly filled with puzzles, photography and interesting facts. Try it with your family today - and get your first 6 issues free.
"The Week Junior is a perfect mix of fun and education. It's a great way to prompt family discussion about the big news stories around the world and is opening my son's mind to a huge variety of different interests available to him away from the screen. I am a huge fan and wish it had been around when I was growing up."
The Week Junior is packed with inspiring content for 8-14s
This Week's Big News - the biggest news stories from around the world.
National News - a selection of the most important and interesting stories from across the UK.
Discover all the latest incredible Science and Technology news.
Explore both sides of an issue with The Big Debate, and find out who's making the headlines in the People section.
Encourage a love of our natural world with the Animals and the Environment feature.
Explore a wide range of topics with the weekly in-depth feature, All About.
Get 6 FREE issues
- Start your trial and receive your first 6 print issues for free
- Spark your children's natural curiosity and excitement
- Never miss an issue with free delivery to your door every week
- Your subscription will continue at £29.99 every 13 issues thereafter
Don't just take my word for it!
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.