Life Skills Education eLearning Portal

Welcome, and thanks for coming to the Life Skills eLearning portal. We are in the process of completing our first-ever digital eLearning programme, Alcohol and Water Safety, which we hope to have ready by the end of May 2023.

Future updates

Our Secondary Education Digital Modules

By far, our most requested programme, we have developed four modules for delivery within a secondary education setting. Also for use in more targeted interventions, we aim to have this programme ready to pilot in early 2024.

We are Life Skills Education Charity

We know that education has the power to change behaviour. 

That is why we believe all young people should have access to the tools they need to grow and thrive. We have developed a range of programmes designed to help young people make better choices around these issues.

We believe all young people should have access to the tools to grow and thrive.  We aim to do this by:

  • Developing and delivering a suite of programmes that use our SKILL Decision-Making Model, a tool to help young people think about their choices and the consequences they have on themselves and others.
  • Empowering young people with the confidence to open up meaningful conversations around tricky subjects with their parents, schools and broader support networks.
  • Creating more resilient communities with improved health outcomes by reducing the effects of substance misuse on people and shared spaces. 

Register your interest in our eLearing programmes now.

Investing in young people

Safer, Happier Young People
Safer Spaces for All
– Facilitating Partnership and Engagement

Why it Matters

  • There are over 300,000 young people under the care of at least one parent undergoing treatment for some form of alcohol or drug dependency.
  • Drug misuse poisoning deaths have increased by nearly 80% since 2012.
  • Hospital admissions due to drug dependency, drug-related mental and behaviour disorders and misuse poisonings are 5-6 times higher in the most deprived areas.
  • 768 young people aged between 15 and 19 died from drug misuse last year
  • 11,013 were in contact with alcohol and drug treatment services.