After 30 years on ITV, the service moved to
Channel 4 and
S4C from 14 September 1987, allowing ITV to concentrate on building a fully commercial daytime schedule. On Friday 12 June and Thursday 25 June the service had been broadcast on Channel 4 as a form of trial, whilst ITV broadcast ITN's coverage of the
1987 election and the
state opening of Parliament. On these occasions, after midday any regional variation programming was transmitted nationally. In the run up to the move to Channel 4 and S4C, trailers were shown after schools programmes (and, in some regions, during regular programming) to promote the move, as well while also acknowledging and commemorating the 30th anniversary of the service. Also a programme presented by Anna Ford looking back at 30 years of ITV schools output was transmitted in May 1987 but was repeated on 13 September 1987. Just two pieces of interval music were used after September 1987:
The Journey for a
3D holding device, and
Just a Minute which backed a redesigned clock. The music never changed on a termly basis during this era. The two pieces of music used on
Channel 4, the Journey and Just A Minute, were both written in 1986 by "James Aldenham", which was a pseudonym for
Brian Bennett, former drummer with
The Shadows, and who has, for many years, written TV themes, such as the BBC golf theme tune. Just a Minute also featured as background music on
Coronation Street on 22 March 1998. The transmission times were the same, 09:30 to 12:00. At 09:28, the four ITV logos glided onto stage, followed by the first minute of The Journey, before gliding off stage. The 3D countdown clock spun onto screen at this point. For all other programmes the holding device would be faded up, and the music faded in at where it had reached. Once the tune had reached the end, the ITV logos glided off stage, and were replaced by the clock. Presentation was handled by Channel 4 in London with announcements for support material pre-recorded and voiced mainly by Central announcer Ted May in Birmingham (a role initially filled by Paul Veysey, another Central announcer). On ITV, at the end of schools programmes, the regional ITV announcers would make their own closing announcements over a holding slide, before introducing the lunchtime programming. On Channel 4, however, at the end of schools programming, on 12 June and 25 June, Nothing Doing played over a caption stating that schools programming would be shown the next day on ITV before showing the interval caption and then fading back to black before the testcard and music. At the end of schools programming from 14 September, the ITV logos glided onto stage, with the first ten seconds of
The Journey. This was rapidly faded to black, after which the Channel 4 logo appeared and the announcer introduced the next programme. On the first afternoon after schools programming, Channel 4 showed a film because programmes for the Open College and
Business Daily began transmission week commencing 21 September 1987. If there was a gap should schools programmes finish early, Channel 4 would show a menu of programmes beginning at 12.00 accompanied by music, but if programmes ended early in another ITV region (ie Scottish/Grampian/Border or Ulster) then the holding device would play until the network was ready to hand back to Channel 4. From Monday 9 January 1989,
Sesame Street was shown at 8.30am so Channel 4 showed a menu of programmes with music prior to the transmission of schools programmes pre-recorded by announcer Nigel Lambert. After the introduction of breakfast television in April 1989, it was necessary to extend the first interval to five minutes due to the 9:25 am finish time of
The Channel 4 Daily. For the first three minutes,
Channel 4 would play one of their own interval tracks – between April 1989 and the end of 1991 over a still of the 3D clock and throughout 1992, the ITV "rotomotion" between 13 January 1992 and 1 December 1992. In both cases, at 09:27:50 the music and image would be faded out, and then at exactly 09:28 the 3D logos glided onto stage. At the same time the educational officers employed by the ITV companies saw their contracts terminated and a new company called the Educational Television Company was established to continue the relationship between teachers and the schools service when it came to ordering accompanying support material. From Monday 11 January 1993, the holding device was no longer used for the first programme, and the introduction cut into 40 seconds of the clock. The holding device did appear for all other programmes. This ended on Monday 28 June 1993, signalling the end of this particular era and style of schools television broadcast. The very last programme on ITV Schools on 4 was
The Technology Programme, at 11:41 am.
Regional variations Between September 1987 and June 1992, Grampian Television, Scottish Television, Border Television, Ulster Television (UTV) and
S4C opted out of the main ITV Schools on Channel 4 service to show regional ITV Schools programmes such as
Swings & Roundabouts. On S4C,
Welsh-language programmes were seen under the
S4C Ysgolion banner, and used their own holding devices and clock similar to ITV Schools, but used the same music as the national holding device. S4C used the traditional ITV Schools holding device for English language programmes, but the S4C logo was keyed over the Channel 4 logo on the
aston bar at the bottom of the screen. In preparation for Channel 4 becoming independent of ITV, all regional variations ended at the end of the Summer Term in June 1992, with all programmes, such as
Videomaths and
How We Used to Live, fully networked. The only exception was S4C in Wales, which continued to opt out some English programmes for its Welsh-language programmes. This continued after ITV Schools was re-branded as Channel 4 Schools, with S4C adopting
S4C Schools for its English programmes, continuing to use
S4C Ysgolion for its Welsh programmes. ==Channel 4 Schools==