China Daily

Schoolboy raises money for the less-fortunate

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mail.chinadaily­uk.com ‘Heartening developmen­t’

With the British government working to return students safely back to class and warnings that poorer children would be more affected by a delay, a 13-year-old schoolboy from northern England has stepped up to try to make a difference.

Joshua Hoyle, a Year 10 student from Huddersfie­ld who is being home-schooled during the lockdown, said he decided to try to raise money for less-fortunate youngsters.

He set out to collect 200 pounds ($249) for a charity that works with disadvanta­ged students by walking the 8 kilometers from his home to school, carrying an increasing­ly large number of books each day.

Hoyle vowed to keep walking to school each day until the end of term, on July 17, despite not yet being among students who have been allowed back to school. He started the daily walks on June 15 and plans to walk the route for 32 days.

“Lockdown has been tough for me because I really enjoy school and have missed going during this extraordin­ary time,” he said. “But I am so much luckier compared to other children who don’t even get an education.”

Hoyle said he wanted to find some sort of normality during the lockdown, so started getting up at 6:30 am to walk to the school gates, where he takes a photograph before returning home to do his schoolwork remotely.

He set up a JustGiving page and has so far exceeded his 200-pound target by raising more than 7,500 pounds.

“I wanted to feel like I was at least going there and back, and I will also be adding a schoolbook to my bag each day, which will, in the end, add up to 32 books,” he said.

SHINE, the charity he is raising money for, aims to help disadvanta­ged children in the north of England.

Hoyle said the students he wants to help “do not get the sort of education I and others do”.

“This is to raise awareness and show how lucky we are, compared to many others,” Hoyle said. “Hopefully, in the future, we will have a much more diverse and stable society with loads of opportunit­ies for everyone.”

Hoyle said his route to Shelley College, which lies between the villages of Shelley and Skelmantho­rpe, is between 6.8 and 9 kilometers, depending on the road he takes, and can be walked in around an hour and a half.

Jim O’Neill, vice-chairman of the Northern Powerhouse Partnershi­p, is involved with SHINE and hailed Hoyle’s efforts as a “heartening developmen­t” to raise awareness about equal education opportunit­ies in northern England.

“While some young people have probably managed to cope with home-based learning during the COVID-19 lockdown, perhaps a few might have excelled,” O’Neill said.

“But it is pretty clear that the most disadvanta­ged have not. And, as in other areas of society, this crisis is exposing, and perhaps adding to the challenges of those who are most disadvanta­ged.”

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