Young people taking part in the Duke of Edinburgh Awards could go on urban expeditions or play computer games amid plans to boost numbers by the year 2026.
The awards were set up in 1956 by Prince Philip and it has since spread to more than 140 countries with millions of people taking part.
Ruth Marvel, its chief executive, now wants to expand it in the UK and has targeted reaching one million young people, up from its current 300,000.
The Duke of Edinburgh at a presentation reception for gold award holders in Edinburgh, 2017
Among its plans to attract new participants is to add urban expeditions to where the Brixton riots happened and the introduction of esports, according to The Times.
The Duke of Edinburgh staged an extraordinary boardroom coup to save a charity founded by his former headmaster at Gordonstoun, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.
Having learned that The Outward Bound Trust was on the brink of going bust, he arrived unexpectedly at an emergency board meeting in Oxford.
Furious at the prospect of a charity of which he was patron being wound up, Prince Philip removed the chairman and took on the role himself.
He then sacked the chief executive and many of the trustees before telling the stunned meeting: ‘Our mission is clear. We must proceed with rescuing this tremendous organisation.’
The Rev Neil Gardner, minister of Canongate Kirk in Edinburgh, is domestic chaplain to the Queen. Prince Philip’s funeral took place on Saturday. Mr Gardner, who grew up in Dunbar before leaving for university, said much had “rightly been made of his enduring sense of duty and service”. The minister, who previously worked at Alyth in Perth and Kinross, and as an Army chaplain with the Black Watch Regiment, said: “When Philip of Greece, as he was in those days, was appointed guardian – the equivalent of head boy – at Gordonstoun in the Easter term of 1939, [founder] Kurt Hahn described him as having ‘the greatest sense of service of all the boys in the school’.
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Susanna Reid showed off her new hair do on Good Morning Britain on Tuesday after taking a trip to the salon.
The presenter, 50, looked stunning as she showcased her new locks in an eye-popping orange dress, adding a splash of colour to screens.
She took to Instagram on Monday to share a before snap from a recent visit to the hairdresser as lockdown restrictions begin to ease across England.
New locks: Susanna Reid showed off her cropped bob on Good Morning Britain on Tuesday after taking a trip to the salon as lockdown restrictions begin to ease
Before: She took to Instagram on Monday to share a before snap from a recent visit to the hairdresser in which her tresses reached past her shoulders