Lizzie greenwood-hughes biography sampler

  • Recent LCF graduates Lizzy Maud Greenwood and Niamh Elstone share their favourite projects, and key advice for those looking to start their.
  • The Newsround survey suggests a surprising snapshot of children.
  • List of pages and references to BBC 'doomed' sites.
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  • lizzie greenwood-hughes biography sampler
  • Olympics blog

    It seems a little unfair when you had 10, athletes competing for medals in 28 different sports, but the Beijing Olympics will mainly be remembered for the deeds of just two young men - a year-old sprinter from Trelawny, Jamaica and a year-old swimmer from Baltimore, USA.

    In the space of a few weeks here in China, Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps transformed themselves from notable names within their own sports into global sporting superstars.

    One was fuelled by chicken nuggets and yams, the other by fried egg and cheese sandwiches with extra mayo, but on track and in water, they each made the impossible seem easy.

    Bolt was born for those sorts of nights in the Bird's Nest. The gold medals alone were reason enough for hero status, but the times he ran and they way he did them - gliding gloriously clear in the m, working his golden spikes off in the m - and the poses, dancing and celebrations before and after were like nothing else athletics has ever seen.

    Phelps's relentless brilliance in the Water Cube defied history and science.

    As the seven world records and eight golds piled up, each swim trumped the last - the astonishing comeback in the 4xm freestyle relay, the margin of victory in the m individual medley, the almost unbelievable push to snatch the

    Press Releases

    Newsround celebrates 35 years of broadcasting with survey on lives of children


    Survey on real life in 21st century explodes modern myths on childhood

    • 1 in 4 don't count their fathers as immediate family
    • 74% like school
    • 62% feel their parents worry about them too much
    • Most want to play outside – not on their computer
    • a third want to help the environment
    • and they think Britain is a great place to live

    CBBC's Newsround today unveiled the results of a survey commissioned to discover what life is really like for 21st century children.

    The survey, conducted by Childwise on behalf of Newsround, interviewed 1, children in England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales aged 6 to 12 and explores the key elements of children's lives including family, education, fears, the UK and the future.

    Newsround's research marks 35 years of broadcasting as the only children's television news service in the UK.

    Their lives

    The Newsround survey suggests a surprising snapshot of children. Many children surveyed describe themselves as happy (78%), funny (47%), and clever (41%), and almost all feel ok with the way they are (91%), but revealingly a third (34%) would like to change the way they look, particularly girls (40%).

    Their priorities in lif