Pictured: (l-r) Molly Goddard (Westwood Academy), Joe
Foreman (Stoke Park) and James Knights (Caludon Castle)
A Coventry school has linked up with its neighbour to secure
sponsorship worth thousands of pounds and support a life-changing
project inspired by London 2012.
The Westwood School, in Mitchell Avenue, has joined forces with
Coventry Sports Foundation, which manages the neighbouring Xcel
Leisure Centre, to support Africa Inspires.
Africa Inspires is a London 2012-inspired project led by
Coventry Sports Foundation and supported by Coventry City Council's
2012 Games Team which aims to establish the provision of sport and
PE in schools in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, and supply
sustainable means of providing pupils with clean drinking
water.
Westwood School raised around £3,000 in sponsorship for
the project, including a water analysis kit, from Japanese
world-leading analytical technology company HORIBA.
The kit was used recently to compare the quality of drinking
water in the UK to that in Kampala when ten student ambassadors and
teachers travelled to Uganda where they held a sports festival.
The project links five Coventry secondary schools - Caludon
Castle, Lyng Hall, Stoke Park, Foxford and Westwood Schools along
with five of their feeder primary schools - Wyken Croft, Stoke
Heath, Stoke, Grangehurst and Cannon Park, with five Kampalan
schools Nateete, Mutundwe, Kiddawalime, Bright Future and Family
Primary.
Stuart Davoile, from Westwood School, said: "This project is
fantastic for our students and it allows them to get some
perspective on what is happening in the world.
"It is up to them to bring back their experiences and share them
with their peers, because it has much more impact coming from them
rather than a teacher.
"What they are doing can make a massive difference to the lives
of kids out there and they have the opportunity to leave a
fantastic legacy behind."
The schools have now entered the next stage of fundraising for
the project which aims to see each schools raise £4,000 for
water harvesting installations at their twinned schools.
Paul Breed, chief executive of Coventry Sports Foundation and
Africa Inspires Project Ambassador, said: "We are delighted with
the fundraising efforts of the Westwood School as well as the
support of all the other partner schools and organisations.
"Without their hard work and commitment to this project it
simply could not go ahead.
"Africa Inspires will be life-changing for hundreds of
schoolchildren in both Kampala and Coventry and we are excited to
be at the point where a number of our visions are becoming a
reality."