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Duke of Edinburgh Success for QEII Students

by isleofman.com 29th April 2010

 

It has been another successful year for Duke of Edinburgh Award participants at Queen Elizabeth II High School in Peel.

 

Sixty-four students entered the Scheme and fifty four of them gained Awards - an excellent result.  The school unit is run entirely by volunteer staff and over the past 6 years, 308 students have gained Awards.


The students have to complete four sections to gain a DofE Award.


For the volunteering section participants are encouraged to give time to help others.  The young people logged up over 1550 hours of community service. 

 

Some of the activities included raising money for charity, working in charity shops, helping to coach sports, assisting with voluntary youth groups, riding for the disabled and helping the elderly.


Students are required to learn skills by taking up a hobby.  The skills were many and varied and included bell ringing, dog handling, fly fishing, farming, photography, driving, drama, horse care, gardening and music.


The Physical Recreation section has also to be undertaken with a range of sports that included carriage driving, horse riding, yoga, kayaking, badminton, self-defence, archery and swimming.


For the final section of the Award students have to complete an expedition.  Most participants make their expedition on foot but this year 23 students decided to travel by kayak.


Fourteen students gained their Gold Awards.  They have to undertake their expeditions off Island with groups travelling to Cumbria, Snowdonia, West Greenland and Vancouver Island.


Gold Award participants also have to do a residential project and these were carried out in Romania, Costa Rica, Sweden, Vancouver Island and Greenland.


One student on completion of her Gold Expedition wrote "how proud all this makes me feel, looking back I realise how much I have accomplished, fears I have overcome, found personal strengths I never knew I had. I have proved to myself what I can do.  I can do anything if I put my mind to it."


QEII students and staff have thanked the many volunteers in the community who have helped with the Award by providing opportunities to participate in sport, youth activities and charity work.

 

Gold Awards

Emily Biggart, Alex Bowers, Ben Crookall, Charlie Griffiths, Rachel Hall, Rowan Robinson, Jack Scarlett, Jack Sleight, Sarah Walker, Nicholas Watt.


Silver Awards 

Josh Smith, Polly Rogerson, Suzanne Thomas, Hollie Devlin, Rebecca Fong, Clare Fisher, Eleanor Jones, Sarah Walker, kaya Teare, Rosie Hesketh, David Watt.


Bronze Awards 

Nicole McKnight,Josh Smith, Robbie Daniels, Hannah Brockhouse, Rebecca Beavis, Alyssa Whittam, Daniel Gibson, Olivia Newstead, Sarah Thursfield, Kirsty Pierce, Tom Skillicorn, Sarah Walker, Karen Reid, Beth Vickers, Alice Henderson, Matthew Middleton, Lucas Croydon, Rebecca Wilson, Sarah Moore, Alice Willoughby, Kim Tastagh, Aaron Leece, Tom Davenport, Jason Crease, Gemma Gell, Megan Gell, Joseph Crookall, Charley Taylor, Eloise White.

 

The school does not have any budget to buy equipment for the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme and relies on donations or fundraising.

 

If anyone has any redundant rucksacks, light weight tents, kayaks of even Isle of Man maps that they no longer require, such equipment would be most welcome.

 

If you can donate any items, please contact Lesley Sleight at QEII School on (01624) 841000.

Posted by isleofman.com
Thursday 29th, April 2010 02:00pm.

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