'Gifted'
(Channel 4, 6 to 6.30pm)
The second in a three-part series about child prodigy Julian Bliss, and the impact his exceptional musical talent has on his parents and siblings.
'Back to Basics'
(Channel 4, 8 to 9pm)
This documentary follows a year in the life of two schoolchildren aged eight and 15 who are sent 5,000 miles from England to school in Jamaica.
24 March
'Boys and Girls - Jordan'
(Channel 4, 8 to 9pm)
This second programme about growing up in the inner city focuses on Jordan, a fun-loving boy who lives on a notorious estate in the London borough of Hackney. His mother is determined to break free from her violent boyfriend and, despite Jordan's attempts to bring order to his chaotic world, the violence he has seen at home spills out into the playground.
26 March
'Montel - Children Out of Control'
(Channel 4, 12.55 to 1.30pm)
The American children featured on this programme have burned down buildings and attacked family members. Some have been diagnosed as having Attention Deficit Disorder, but one doctor tells parents experts don't always have the answers and one mother tells how she took her son off prescribed drugs and cured his violence by changing his diet.
'Booze'
(BBC 1, 11.10 to 11.50pm)
This programme assesses the harm that increased drinking has brought to British society, particularly to women and children.
27 March
'Thinking Allowed'
(BBC Radio 4, 4 to 4.30pm)
Laurie Taylor talks to Professor Judith Butler, who outlines her ideas about how the differences between men and women are culturally enforced rather than biological.
'Tomorrow's World'
(BBC 1, 7 to 7.30pm)
The science programme features a miracle 'sandwich bandage' which heals open wounds fast.
28 March
'Trouble at the Top - Nanny Boys'
(BBC 2, 9.50 to 10.30pm)
This programme, we're told, follows Ben and Oliver Black, the brothers who own the Tinies nanny agency chain, in their attempts to turn Tinies into the McDonald's of the childcare world, with a branch on every high street, slick corporate branding and an emergency service where you can get a nanny delivered to the door like a pizza.
'Scar Stories'
(BBC 1, 10.35 to 11.20pm)
As a toddler Amanda Redman was severely burned when she tipped a saucepan of boiling soup over herself. Her childhood was spent in hospitals having skin grafts and plastic surgery, yet she says that if it wasn't for the scars she might never have become an actress. She talks to four people who have been scarred, including a nursery nurse who was attacked by a man who threw nitric acid in her face.