British Academy Children's Awards

British Academy Children's Awards
Country  United Kingdom
First awarded 1996
Website www.bafta.org/childrens-awards/

The British Academy Children's Awards are presented in an annual award show hosted by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). They have been awarded annually since 1996. Before that, children's awards were a part of the main British Academy Television Awards.

Current awards

Animation

Channel of the Year

Comedy

Drama

Performer

Entertainment

Factual

Pre-School Animation

Pre-School Live Action

Presenter

Writer

International

Short Form

Feature Film

BAFTA Kids' Vote - Feature Film

BAFTA Kids' Vote - Television

BAFTA Kids' Vote - Video Game

Independent Production Company

Interactive: Original

  • 2014: Dixi
  • 2015: Virry
  • 2016: Secret Life of Boys

Interactive: Adapted

Learning - Primary

  • 2006: Mapping Our World
  • 2007: Espresso Education: Espresso Primary
  • 2008: ArtisanCam
  • 2009: Off By Heart
  • 2010: L8R
  • 2011: Quiff and Boot
  • 2012: Seeking Refuge
  • 2013: Children Of World War 2
  • 2014: Lizard Girl
  • 2015: My Life, My Religion
  • 2016: I Can't Go to School Today
  • 2017: History Bombs: Online History Resources

Learning - Secondary

  • 2006: Timelines: Empire
  • 2007: Recollection Eyewitnesses: Remembering the Holocaust
  • 2008: L8R
  • 2009: Troubled Minds
  • 2010: Timelines.tv: Smallpox Through Time
  • 2011: Privates
  • 2012: L8R Youngers 2
  • 2013: Just a Few Drinks
  • 2014: Poetry: Between the Lines
  • 2015: Poetry: Between the Lines
  • 2016: Ten Pieces II

Video Game

Special Award

Former awards

Pre-School

Discontinued in 2000, for separate categories for live-action and animation.

  • 1999: Tecwyn Y Tractor

BAFTA Kids' Vote

Discontinued in 2009, for separate voting categories for TV, movies, video games and websites.

BAFTA Kids' Vote - Website

Breakthrough Talent

CBBC Me and My Movie

  • 2008: The Prank
  • 2009: Vern's Vacation

BAFTA Young Game Designers

  • 2010: HAMSTER: Accidental World Domination
  • 2011: Rollin' Scotch

BAFTA Young Game Designers: Game Concept

  • 2012: Vacuum Panic AKA Suck It Up

BAFTA Young Game Designers: Game Making

  • 2012: Smiley Dodgems

Interactive

Discontinued in 2014 for separate Interactive categories: Original and Adapted.

Multiplatform

Writer: Adapted

Discontinued in 2006 for one sole Writer category.

Writer: Original

Discontinued in 2006 for one sole Writer category.

Schools - Drama

  • 1999: Junk
  • 2000: Dream On
  • 2001: ID Citizenship: Beyond The Boundary
  • 2002: Scene - Offside
  • 2003: Lion Mountain
  • 2004: The Illustrated Mum
  • 2005: Scene - Oddsquad

Schools Factual - Primary

Discontinued in 2006 for Learning - Primary.

  • 1999: Rat-A-Tat-Tat: Beans On Toast and Ketchup On Your Cornflakes
  • 2000: English Express: Texts - Football
  • 2001: Zig Zag - Snapshots: Children In The Second World War
  • 2002: Geography Junction: Jamaica - The Coastal Environment
  • 2003: Let's Write a Story: Writing Academy
  • 2004: Thinking Skills: Think About It - Hiding Places
  • 2005: Primary History - Indus Civilisation: Mohenjo-Daro

Schools Factual - Secondary

Discontinued in 2006 for Learning - Secondary.

  • 1999: Turning Points: Alcohol Misuse - Emma's Story
  • 2000: Lifeschool Sex - Saying it for the Girls
  • 2001: The Test Of Time - Forgiveness
  • 2002: History File: Britain 1906-1918 - A History In Photographs
  • 2003: The English Programme: Film Focus: Animation - Food Commercials
  • 2004: In Search of the Tartan Turban
  • 2005: School of Hard Knocks

References

  1. "Children's | Drama in 2002". British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  2. "Children's in 2010 | BAFTA Awards". Awards.bafta.org. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
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