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Sophie Carrigill, Careers Advice and Hen Dos

Sophie Carrigill, one of the rising stars in wheelchair basketball on setting her sights on Rio; the link between stress and breast cancer; careers advice in schools; hen parties - bonding or brawling? Jenni Murray presents the programme that offers a female perspective on the world.

Available now

58 minutes

Last on

Fri 14 Jun 2013 10:00

Chapters

  • Are successful women more at risk of breast cancer?

    With Dr Tetyana Pudrovska,Penn. State Uni., & Prof. Tony Howell, Uni. of Manchester

    Duration: 09:13

  • Careers Advice in Schools

    With Deidre Hughes, Chair of the Nat. Careers Council & Alan Chapman, careers coordinator.

    Duration: 09:52

  • Sophie Carrigill

    Sophie on being selected to play for Britain in the European Wheelchair Basketball Champs

    Duration: 06:52

  • Inclusive Mosque Initiative

    Jenni talksto Shaista Gohir MBE, Chair of Muslim Women’s Network UK.

    Duration: 05:29

  • Hen Parties: Brawling or Bonding?

    With Prof. Marion Roberts, co-author Hen Parties; & writer Hannah Pool.

    Duration: 09:40

Sophie Carrigill

Two years ago 18-year-old Sophie Carrigill was paralysed in an accident.Ìý A keen sportswoman Sophie thought she would never be able to play any kind of sport again.Ìý But, just 18 months after taking up wheelchair basketball, Ìýshe’s been selected to play for the British team in the in Frankfurt on June 28th.ÌýSophie joins Jenny in the studio to talk about how basketballÌý has changed her outlook on life.

Careers Advice in Schools: Is it working better under new reforms?

Two reports out this month raise Ìýnew concernsÌý about the way careers advice is being delivered toÌý pupils in school.Ìý Research by educational publishers, Pearson UK, ÌýfoundÌý that over a third of secondary school pupils use televisionÌý programmes to help them decide what jobs they might do once they leave school.Ìý In its own report, the National Careers Council isÌýÌýcalling forÌý major cultural changes toÌý address theÌý worrying mismatch between the career aspirations of young people and the reality of the jobs market. In 2011 government took the responsibility of providing careers advice away from local authorities and made Ìýit the statutory duty of schools instead.ÌýÌý So is careers adviceÌý working any better as a result? Jenni talks to Deidre Hughes, Chair of the , and to Alan Chapman a careers coordinator at aÌý state school in Manchester.ÌýÌý

Hen Dos: Brawling or Bonding

It’s an event likely to strike terror, fear and dread into the steeliest of hearts – an invitation to a hen party. The stereotypical British hen party has gained a reputation for being loud, tacky and debauched and a quick online search reveals hundreds of thousands of sites offering all kinds of events, from the quirky to the frankly outlandish.Ìý But despite its tarnished reputation, does the hen party serve an important social function?ÌýÌý

Ìý

, co-authorÌý of Hen Parties: Bonding Or Brawling and writerÌýÌýjoin Jenni to discuss.

Are successful women more at risk of breast cancer?

New research emerging in The States claims that women in professional jobs are 1.7 times more likely to get breast cancer than other groups of women. The findings, based on a 55-year study of women who were in their thirties in the 1970s, links job stress and cancer, and suggests that the longer a woman holds a higher status job, the greater the risk. The authors also maintain that while women going into management in the 1970s were breaking new ground, the same kind of stress still affects women today. Jenni discusses the findings with lead author for the study, Dr Tetyana Pudrovska of , and withÌýTony Howell, Professor of Medical Oncology at the University of Manchester and .

Inclusive Mosque Initiative

A group of Muslims say they want to open up mosques to everyone regardless of their gender or sexual orientation. (IMI) says it would allow men and women to pray side-by-side and openly welcome the gay community. It's a controversial move that's sure to anger many people in the Islamic community, but the group says it wants to make mosques more accessible.ÌýShaista Gohir MBE is Chair of Muslim Women’s Network UK and joins Jenni from Birmingham.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Jenni Murray
Interviewed Guest Sophie Carrigill

Broadcast

  • Fri 14 Jun 2013 10:00

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