 Martin here at Westbourne Primary School just give us a brief overview of what we're here doing today. So today yeah we're looking at basically what we're doing as a school, what our journey's been like over the last 18 months really so for the last 18 months we've done quite a lot of work trying to make our school a little bit greener. We've just achieved our first award at the end of last year joining the Green Schools Eco Green Flag Programme so we've been part of that working alongside Keeping Britain Tidy. We've managed to invest from the council with things like litter picks so we do that as part of an Eco team. We've got an Eco committee together, two children from each year group. We meet together at least half-termly and from that we set up an Ashen Plan each year about what we're going to do. So last year we had a bit of big focus on litter, had a big focus on energy. We work with forest schools out here in our outdoor classroom which children love so each half-term. We have gentlemen who comes in from forest schools and he works with groups of children from every single class, maybe year group. It might be linked to their topics that they're doing in school or it might be linked to other things which are extracurricular. We also do things like gardening clubs. There's quite a lot that's going on at the moment really. Yeah, so Westbourne's one of our partner schools who've shown some really fantastic impact on their community around different green actions that they've been using. They've recently just got their Green Flag Award where they've been creating a whole community garden for their school. They've been setting up a whole Eco committee and really making some positive impacts in their community. Today we're doing like an Eco, in school we have an Eco community and we like do recycling checks and we do like energy checks and clustering if the boards are on or lights are on and we check the recycling bins and see if they're full or none have used them. I think it's really important, particularly I find some of our children maybe don't share some of the experiences that children elsewhere might experience so making them aware of the wider world rather than just you know Bradford itself. I think that's really really important. It's important to try and get the rest of the communities involved. We've done litter picks where we might have gone on the streets around the school rather just school itself informing parents informing other adults to try and engage with the project and what we're doing and hopefully that will carry through once they go to second school and as they grow up as adults hopefully having that awareness of their place in the world and what they can do to try and protect it and the environment hopefully it'll set them up for life. Yeah it's fantastic it's really great to see you know somewhere that's literally a five minute walk from the stadium really refreshing for us as a club and as a community to see that and we're really proud to invite them to the match on Saturday so that they can they can experience that as a reward almost for the fantastic work they've been doing and and the impact that we're seeing on the community as a result of what they're doing. How much is that a responsibility of ours as well as a community foundation to work with these local schools but to encourage the common the correct practices and the work that we're doing like this in order to help the environment and everything around this that they're doing here and elsewhere. How much pride do we take in that as a community foundation as one of the partner schools that we are? Oh it's massive and I think especially in more recent generations where the environment's really come to the forefront it's something that we we're really starting to put more of a focus on now which is it is really good to see from all of us and things like this and the events that we're doing over this weekend really really start to cement that this is something that as a club and a community a really starting to put our stamp on. I can't have balloons! No, don't have balloons, it's a bag. What do you think you got here? Just bring your little open and then I'll get it. Got it. There's a bottle cap there or you take that up. So Noah do you want to talk to us about what you're doing today? I'm sure. We're a little bit on you. There's a lot of you there. I don't know what. Oh, she's getting cleaner. Why is it important? How important is it to pick up all this litter and put it away? It's very important because it's like an animal community and it starts eating the rubbish and it dies. What other work have you been doing as well as part of your eco-leading what else do you do? We had a big speech about climate change. In the other playground that side and talking about how we need to stop littering and all of that. At the end of the day, we're the adults here. We've contributed to the state that the world is in and I suppose we want to leave them a better world and if we educate them in the right way I think hopefully then they can educate their children and further and further and further. This weekend, a big day on the footballing calendar. Green football weekend. Brafford City at home to Mansfield Town. You and these children will be coming along to the game. I guess it's a good reward for them to come along and see some football and celebrate as we mentioned what is an important day on the footballing calendar to spread the work that they're doing far and wide to a big audience. It's brilliant, particularly because we have a lot of children. I've got keen interest in football boys and girls and I think if they see this message being delivered by football teams I think that just helps to reinforce it. I know our children will be really excited about the opportunity to go to Brafford City and to try and spread the message further to people who are there and beyond. All the clubs that are doing this over this coming weekend, Green football weekend, I think it's going to be really, really good.