Sophie McKenna talks about the Power of Women campaign
βUnfortunately, I didnβt get to meet Jane, but I feel as though I know her because I talk about her all the time in the work that we do and from what people tell me she was a real force of nature and the stories that I hear about her work are just incredible.β
That work now lives on through Power of Women β POW β the campaign McKenna helps lead as Head of Campaign and Operations and which is becoming one of the regionβs most distinctive voices on equality, aspiration and its future workforce.
βEssentially, Power exists to improve the lives of girls and women in Teesside,β she tells me in an office at Teesside University, where Jane worked.
βWeβre very much rooted in Tees Valley. We may expand, but at the moment weβre very much focussed on making lives here better for girls and women.
βWe do that mainly through education and engagement and speaking to the young people, speaking to women and using their voices to shape our work, including a core primary school programme, which often shocks people because they think, well, why primary school?
βBut we hear a lot about secondary and how theyβre a melting pot and there are so many issues β and yes, there are β but we believe, and the research also confirms, that we need to be working with young people because by age seven, those gender stereotypes really become ingrained and we form genderβlimiting beliefs.
βIf we can work with young people in primary schools and hopefully start to combat some of those stereotypes and those limiting beliefs that we form, then weβve got a chance to change things.
With that determination, we started in September going into the schools and working with the whole of the class to do a really fun session around gender equality, but also looking at the choices that you have as a young person and what your future might look like.
Sophie McKenna POW Head of Campaign and Operations Picture: SARAH CALDECOTT (Image: NQ)
βAt the moment, I think the problem that we have is with stereotyping β itβs so ingrained in our society, in the media, in the toys we play with, in the clothes we wear, itβs almost subliminal.
βIβm a parent myself and I even find myself saying things and I have to correct myself. We say things to boys like βman upβ, for example β thatβs a prime example. Itβs that everyday language that we would use which actually has connotations.β
She is clear there is more to do beyond the pupils, perhaps teacher training and parental work.
βWeβre looking at how we can advance things going forward because I think it is so important to have the parents on board with what weβre doing for boys and for girls. We need men and men need equality just as much as women do β itβs not just a female thing.
βWe did actually just work with girls initially, but then we changed after feedback from schools and we know see the full picture.
One of POWβs most powerful tools is its network of business volunteers and role models, and Sophie says she is trying to get as many role models signed up β relatable people who can tell their stories to primary and secondary pupils. The job they will do shouldnβt need doing, but it does, and Sophie is the person to make sure it succeeds helped by school leaders themselves, she tells me.
βWe started to do some work in secondary because we were having schools coming to us and telling us they had a group of girls who were disengaged from learning and canβt see anything good about themselves. They had absolutely no confidence, so the schools asked if we could help.
βA lot of the time we go in with our role models and operate a coaching model. We do some oneβtoβone coaching, and get the role models to speak honestly about their experiences. Thatβs where it really lies β saying, βYou can do this, just go for it and take the opportunity and have that confidence in yourself.β The young people can really relate to that.β
βYou canβt be what you donβt seeβ has become a touchstone for POWβs business engagement and Sophie McKenna is determined to make it as easy as possible for employers and professionals to get involved.
βItβs not a massive commitment,β she says.
βItβs not as though weβre signing up and saying you need to mentor this person for a year. You can literally take three hours out of your day and just come along for one event and speak to some young people about your job.
βItβs very low commitment and I always say to people, Iβm not keeping an eye on whoβs doing the most, just give your time, thatβs brilliant for us and thatβs all weβre asking for β just that one event. To be honest, we have our events in secondary school with maybe 20 women and two or three men that come along and support β weβre still building it up.β
βItβs really important that we have that male perspective and it isnβt just us going into schools and saying, βPower of Women β you can do anything you wantβ. You need to lean on the men in your lives that can support you and help you get there as well. Itβs a really key message.
βI think the overall equality picture has got better, but all the research shows inequalities are still faced by women – more likely to be paid less than men, more likely to take on caring responsibilities, have poorer health outcomes. So itβs there in black and white. Weβre not there yet.
Sophie McKenna POW Head of Campaign and Operations Picture: SARAH CALDECOTT (Image: NQ)
βItβs often so unconscious though, and so ingrained. Thatβs the challenge, isnβt it? Itβs tackling almost the societal expectations that we have of what a female is and what a male is. Until we can tackle that and eradicate it, we wonβt ever have full gender equality. I do think that girls are now propelling forward and weβve definitely made waves in saying, βYou can do what you want, you can achieve what you wantβ β there is that belief,β she says.
βBut sadly there just arenβt the structures a lot of the time to actually facilitate that.
βObviously a female has a baby and then that sets you back, so then thatβs your pay gap. Theyβre more likely to go partβtime, so theyβre more likely to have a lower pension than the male counterparts, and theyβre likely to be paid less because theyβre working partβtime.β
βThen typically as well towards the end of the career, itβs that bookβend caring β more likely to care for elderly parents β and that responsibility just tends to fall on a woman.
βBut there are certainly reasons to be hopeful, such as more provisions for men to take more paternity leave. I think a lot of men would have liked to have had more time off with their children and had that quality time too, to share that maternity leave.
βHopefully thatβs something weβre going to see a lot more of and a lot more companies following that approach, which could potentially help us with that pay gap as well.β
In all of POWβs work, the most powerful message is one that comes from the heart. Sophie has a 10βyearβold son and a sixβyearβold daughter and says she can already see the differences between them.
βFor my son, I think I worry the most around mental health because I think thatβs such a big thing with boys, along with social media and the online world. Heβs at the crux of growing up β he wants a mobile phone and I donβt want to give him one.
βItβs just a scary world. You worry about them being left out, but you also worry about having this phone and you know how curious children are, they can literally access anything. Itβs just like βtake this phone and see everything youβve ever wanted to know about or look atβ β itβs just scary.
βSo I really worry about that, but with my son, Iβll always tell him he can just ask me anything and he wonβt be in troubleβ.
βAt this stage, they love each other and they hate each other,β she laughs.
βBut I am very careful with my eldest. I almost feel like Iβm probably more protective towards him as a boy than maybe I am towards my daughter, which is interesting. But I think the wider lesson is about positivity β thatβs something that I really try to drum into my two β that youβve got to have a really positive mindset.
Prof Jane Turner (Image: TU)
If they are saying βI donβt want to get up, I hate Mondays, I hate schoolβ well you canβt hate everything about school. So what do you like about it?
βIβm not saying I expect them to be happy all the timeβ¦. but the whole thing about Mondays I find really interesting β why do we hate Mondays? Itβs just another day. Come on, we need to flip this. Iβm really trying to get them to have that positive outlook on life and to advocate for themselves. With POW, that is a key part of the programme β around using your voice and having the confidence to speak up.
βYou go through an education system where you have to listen to the teacher, you have to follow rules β and thereβs nothing wrong with that,β she says.
βBut Iβm really trying to teach them to say itβs okay to challenge something. If you donβt like where youβre sat in the class, something as little as that, or you donβt agree with something, you can voice your opinion respectfully.
βI think thatβs something we need to nurture more in order to ensure that young people have the best positive outcomes for themselves, especially children living in really disadvantaged areas where they might not always have the positive role models.
βWe as an organisation really want to advocate for those young people, listen to their experiences, listen to their opinions and use that to shape our future programme,β she says.
βThatβs where weβre on track to go for the next part of our aims and objectives. We really want to use child advocacy as part of shaping what we do in the future because we know that we could do so much.
βItβs almost like we have so much enthusiasm and so much energy for making a difference, but we want it to be really focused on what young people want and bring them along with us rather than just tell them, βThis is our programme and this is what weβre doing.β We want them to really be involved in shaping it. Thatβs how we will get the best results.β
Her own story is another powerful asset in her work.
She grew up in Brotton β a rural small village where she went to the local church school and her dad was a milkman.
βEverybody knew each other β I would never get away with anything because everyone knew my dad. I went to the local secondary school and that was like 500 kids in the school, so I got the shock of my life when I went off to college and there were all these people from Middlesbrough.
βI struggled, to be honest,β she says. βI didnβt enjoy college, but I was fairly academic and I think I had that instilled in me β the hard work and βyouβve got to work hard and do your bestβ. It was never about the results, but always about doing your best in everything.
βRight and wrong and fairness was always something I was passionate about, so I did law at university. My mum and dad were very good β they didnβt force anything onto us and they were very balanced. If I said something, they would always challenge me on it and say, βWell, look at the other side.β I loved that.
-βI always took the opportunities β outwardly, I think I had a lot of confidence but maybe inside I struggled with a bit of selfβbelief.
βI ended up working in a JobCentre and that set me off on this whole trajectory of social justice. It was the shock of my life that I met so many different types of people and I saw how other people lived, probably compared to my sheltered upbringing.β
βThat set me on a path of βIβd like to give back and be a bit of a changeβmakerβ,β she says.
βI got to work with young people in care and did an amazing art exhibition that showcased their work. But then the job at POW came up and I was working in London a lot and really wanted to work locally, particularly with two young children – and I knew the challenges in the area.
βYou canβt escape the headlines about where we live β we always seem to be the worst at something or the highest at something. We donβt tend to get the positives but we all know what an amazing place it is where we live and the people have such grit.β
As the Tees Valley economy pivots to net zero and new industries, Sophie is adamant that her work is not separate from the regionβs investment story. βYou can have the best education, but if you canβt speak to people, if you canβt have confidence in yourself, if you canβt speak up, then you will struggle,β she says.
βWe call them soft skills and I just hate that term, because actually those are the power skills that hold everything up and really propel you. Thatβs how youβll get into employment, thatβs how youβll be able to be resilient when the challenges come and handle whatever life throws at you β the knockbacks.
βIβve got so many friends where theyβve gone through interview processes and it can be so soulβdestroying. But itβs about having that resilience to say, βNo, I keep going, I keep applying. Build on it, take the constructive criticism and try to do it betterβ Thatβs what we really need to create in young people now, particularly as weβve got this mental health crisis in young people.β
For her, that loop between confidence, opportunity and mental health is central.
She tells me: βItβs so closely linked β the career opportunities, how far you feel you can progress. Then suddenly some kids just get stuck in a rut and think, βItβs not for me, I canβt do it, itβs not for me.β So itβs about, at an early age, saying, βNo, it is for you. You can do this.ββ
In Tees Valleyβs boardrooms and classrooms, that message is starting to land. The challenge now, Sophie suggests, is to make sure it reaches every child who needs to hear it β and every business ready to play its part.