KentOnline

bannermobile

News

Sport

Business

What's On

Advertise

Contact

Other KM sites

CORONAVIRUS WATCH KMTV LIVE SIGN UP TO OUR NEWSLETTERS LISTEN TO OUR PODCASTS LISTEN TO KMFM
SUBSCRIBE AND SAVE
News

Prince William sends message to Laleham Gap School in Ramsgate as Thanet school becomes first in east Kent to gain Prince William Awards

By: Matt Leclere mleclere@thekmgroup.co.uk

Published: 12:20, 22 July 2019

Updated: 12:21, 22 July 2019

Pupils from Thanet have become the first in east Kent to gain the Prince William Award.

Youngsters from Laleham Gap School in Ramsgate received their certificates and watched a video from the future king congratulating them for their hard work.

All 24 children from Years 5 and 6 who started the course at the start of the school year successfully passed.

Pupils from Laleham Gap School in Ramsgate have completed the Prince William Award - the first school in East Kent to do so (14109153)

They were given two awards as part of the qualification - the Prince William Explorer Award and Sports Leadership Certificate - at a special assembly last week.

The school was also presented with a trophy to celebrate it becoming the first in east Kent to succesfully run the award.

mpu1

The course was led by Simon Roser, who visited the school every Thursday afternoon, aiming children to challenge themselves, grow their self-confidence, discipline and working with others.

Mr Roser said: "It was amazing that all the children from different classes worked together to overcome everything and pass the award. It was great to see by the end the children had become a tight unit with a real team ethic.

Youngsters thank teacher Simon Roser who led the course at Laleham Gap School (14109158)

"All of them were looking out for each other. I was so proud of all of them and all they have learnt."

Natalie Hewitt-Zarb, the school's primary resources manager, said children had learnt so much from the award and had enjoyed the team building activities, tug of war, drag the bag and overcoming challenges.

The Prince William Award has three stages for youngsters aged up to six, eight and 12-years-old.

Most of the course leaders are former Armed Forces personnel who use their own experiences in building teamwork, resilience and self-discipline to teach and inspire the children.

News from our universities, local primary and secondary schools including Ofsted inspections and league tables can be found here.

Read more: All the latest news from Thanet

Read more

More by this author

sticky

© KM Group - 2024