Autumn Term – What Have Our Young People Been Up To So Far…..20th September 2022?

From Primary Education to Secondary Education our young people are learning valuable life skills.

In just two weeks we have achieved so much already from being outdoors drawing, cooking, welding, bike mechanics, brick laying, maths, English, farm visits, map reading the list goes on.

They say a picture speaks a thousand words, these pictures hold that to be true:

Drawing in the great outdoors
Learning to cut metal….safety first!
Oil change on a Ducati 900 Supersport, means our young person can do this for himself when one day he gets his own bike!

Cooking is one of those life skills that are most valuable. Learning to budget, read recipes, understand about health and nutrition, the cooking itself and of course the fun of eating what you make!

Oh naughty don’t stick your tongue out at me! Not all young people get the opportunity to visit animals on a farm – our young people spent the day meeting different animals, learning how to feed them, understanding their environment.
Learning Maths & English in a classroom for some young people is fine, for others it can be a challenging environment that makes learning impossible, yet we all understand how important these skills are. So we provide programmes for our young people based around their needs on a 1-2-1 basis, at their own speed. Utilising technology and the ability of young people to learn well when feeling confident and comfortable.
Sharing, playing, working together as a team is as important as the many other skills we help our young people learn to do.

So what is in store for us for the remainder of this term? – more of the same great learning, fun, education and helping our young people ignite their spark!

Our Ethos

No one can begin to affect the world around them until they are CONFIDENT , COMFORTABLE, happy in their own skin and have found their SPARK! We take the time to understand and develop programmes from where the learner is in the world not where we think they should be. The work is underpinned by the Pushforward Wellbeing Index which looks at five key factors to wellbeing.

Share Post Online

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn