Urban School Farm Opens World of Opportunity to British Teenagers

Reuters
Woodchurch High School students line up with their sheep after competing in the Young Handlers class at the Westmorland County Show near Kendal, England, on Sept. 14.

BIRKENHEAD, England (Reuters) — The rural life of rearing rare breed sheep and nurturing alpacas is a world away for many urban teenagers. Yet a British school near Liverpool has opened its students to a wealth of jobs in agriculture and the benefits of nature with its own farm.

The Woodchurch High School farm opened 13 years ago, becoming a haven that nurtures the mental health and confidence of its students.

Based in the town of Birkenhead, which faces Liverpool across the Mersey River, the school counts dairy farmers and veterinarians among its former students who say the school’s farm is the reason they found their calling in life.

Woodchurch itself ranks in the top 10% of local areas in England for income deprivation. Last November local authorities announced that the nearby leisure center would be demolished.

And with British social mobility at its lowest ebb in over 50 years restricting people from moving to a higher income level, the farm’s ability to expose its students to people and professions far removed from the school’s urban trappings is more important than ever.

“It is really important that [young people] have an opportunity to achieve, to thrive, to actually show skills,” headteacher Rebekah Phillips said, adding that it had also helped support social and emotional development.

Each year the students compete in the prestigious Royal Cheshire and Westmorland county shows, displaying skills gained by looking after their sheep, alpacas, goats, pigs and chickens. Many have won prizes and acclaim from farming experts.

“The farming and agricultural communities have opened their arms to us,” Linda Hackett, the farm manager, said.

Year 10 student Ella-Rose Mitchinson, 14, was awarded Student of the Year 2023 by the School Farms Network — a collection of 140 schools, many from rural communities.

For her, the farm represents a safe space, away from the world of social media and the rigors of teenage life.

“It lets me breathe,” she said, adding that she dreams of becoming a veterinary nurse.

Year 8 student Corey Gibson, 13, agreed.

“It provides a happy place where you can be yourself. Animals won’t judge.”

Reuters
Student Ella-Rose Mitchinson, 14, gestures toward one of the school’s pigs as she feeds the animals on the farm on Sept. 11.

Cultivating future

Former student Sophie Tedesco, 27, now works as a dairy farmer in Shropshire, having first tasted farm life at the school before she left it in 2013.

“It opened my eyes to the agricultural world,” she says. “It was just completely different to what we were used to and I just loved it,” she said.

Increasingly the school is recognized as a center for conservation — due to a stroke of luck when it was gifted North Ronaldsay sheep at the farm’s opening in 2010.

Originally from Orkney, the sheep are listed by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as one of four “priority” breeds — the charity’s highest grade of concern.

“Our little school, over 13 years in our one-and-a-half acres has bred over 60 sheep, we’ve had lambs every year. Our sheep count toward the national census for the Rare Breeds Survival Trust,” farm manager Hackett said.

The Headteacher says other schools have shown interest in the farm, but she laments the fact that it is never taken into consideration in the country’s academic review system, despite the broader community impact.

“We have never had one bit of vandalism, ever, in 13 years,” Phillips said.

“I think the worst incident we ever had was the uproar when a child fed a sheep a crisp.”

Reuters
A student uses a stuffed toy dog to practice her head collaring technique on Sept. 6.