Gravity expands its partnership with Bridgwater United FC

This is Gravity is proud to support Bridgwater United Football Club (BUFC) with the Gravity brand now displayed pitch side at Fairfax Park.

The Gravity – BUFC partnership is focused primarily on creating community social value through the delivery of the Gravity Sphero STEM initiative which launched in October 2022. The Sphero initiative prioritises the engagement of young people to raise aspirations through the development of robotics and coding skills through the medium of football – in a way that is accessible to all.  

Gravity is working closely with BUFC on the implementation of local leisure facilities that would replace elements of the 37 Sports & Social Club and integrate new facilities into the community.

This academic year BUFC has partnered with East and West Huntspill schools to introduce the Sphero After School Clubs. In the recent term, our collaboration with East Huntspill saw the successful roll-out of weekly Sphero sessions, engaging approximately 12 students per session over a six-week period.

Past collaborations include sessions with Woolavington, and the integration of Sphero activities into local Sports Camps, monthly student outreach has consistently reached between 100 and 150 students.

This is Gravity’s Director – Planning & Economic Development, Claire Pearce, commented: “Forging closer local partnerships at a grassroots level are key to delivering the genuine social value that we set out to achieve through our environmental and social governance policy. We are proud of the reach that Bridgwater United Sports & Community Trust has achieved in the year since the STEM Sphero initiative launched. Going forward we expect our connection to Bridgwater United FC to grow and we look forward continuing to work with them”.

Bridgwater United FC Head of Community, Dan Rogers, commented: “The support Gravity have given us on our Sphero project has allowed Bridgwater United to expand and enhance its delivery and become the first English non-league football club to deliver the Sphero programme within its locality.

We have seen rapid uptake in STEM interest amongst the children that are working with, so much so that the young people are showing the coaches’ new ways to use block coding!

We are excited to continue our relationship with the Gravity team and cannot wait to get the ‘ball rolling’ on our plans.”

Gravity congratulates Bounce Forward on its partnership with the Harry Kane Foundation

Gravity congratulates Bounce Forward on its partnership announcement with The Harry Kane Foundation

This is Gravity is proud to share the World Mental Health Day announcement that Bounce Forward has entered a far-reaching partnership with the Harry Kane Foundation. Their shared mission is to inspire and transform a generation’s thinking about mental health and how to nurture and build psychological fitness.

The partnership will provide free psychological fitness training and educational resources, designed to nurture and build mental resilience, and emotional wellbeing, proven to have a positive impact. These resources will be available in schools, workplaces, and to a broader audience through Harry’s influence, platforms, and networks, with the goal of promoting positive mental health across generations.

The partnership kicks off with 17 schools across nine regions in England gaining access to Bounce Forward’s Healthy Minds teaching resources, featuring bespoke content co-authored by Harry and his wife, Kate Kane.

Gravity introduced Bounce Forward to Bridgwater in 2021 as an integrated part of its transformational strategy to create a new era of employment. During the pandemic, Gravity worked with Bounce Forward to support local schools and young people and initiated a ‘Gravity Young People’s Design Competition’ in collaboration with MOBIE.

To date, Bounce Forward has trained 229 teachers across 10 schools, including; Bridgwater & Taunton College, Bridgwater & Taunton College Academy, Quantock Education Trust (4 schools), Puriton Primary, North Petherton Primary, Willowdown, North Newton Community Primary. Bounce Forward has also reached 215 local families through their ‘Raise Resilience’ online course.  

In parallel with Bounce Forward, Gravity is driving further social value outcomes through its ‘Sphero’ initiative with Bridgwater United Football Club (BUFC) Community Trust, promoting STEM opportunities by using football as a medium to develop skills in coding and robotics.

Bridgwater and Taunton College Trust is one of the 17 schools involved from the outset of the Bounce Forward & Harry Kane Foundation partnership, it is the only Multi-Academy Trust at launch. Bounce Forward will work with all 6 schools within the trust (3 secondaries and 3 primaries) through a central strategy.

Gravity looks forward to exploring how our community stakeholders can achieve the optimum outcomes for young people through these exciting initiatives with Bounce Forward and BUFC.

This is Gravity, Director – Planning & Economic Development, Claire Pearce commented: “This announcement is a huge step forward for Bounce Forward and with a supportive institution such as the Harry Kane Foundation I’m sure that it will enable them to reach more young people and help equip them with skills needed to live happier healthier lives, the whole team at Gravity couldn’t be more pleased for them.

To have a local trust included in their launch given our introduction into their area is a huge boost and look forward to seeing what other initiatives local schools can be part of going forward.

Ensuring local young talent develops in a secure and nurturing environment that stimulates emotionally intelligent adults will be part of jigsaw of the requirements for a fulfilled and productive workforce at Gravity for years to come.”

Clare Lewis, Personal Development Lead at Bridgwater & Taunton Trust commented: “Healthy Minds will become an integral part of our Personal Development programme as we build our student’s confidence, resilience and knowledge so that they can keep themselves mentally healthy. The Bounce Forward programme will help to facilitate the development of skills and qualities that will enable our students to become independent and thrive in society.”

Bounce Forward CEO, Lucy Bailey commented: “When it comes to mental health, prevention is so much better than cure, and our psychological health is as important as physical health. It is increasingly challenging to navigate our changing and complex world. For adults, it is hard, for children it is even harder. We need to teach our children, as part of their core education, and there is no better way than with Healthy Minds. Teaching our children about the brain, the role of positive emotions and the value of optimism and human connection is vital learning for the world we live in. We need to help young people not only to deal well with the setbacks they will inevitably face throughout life, but also equip them to embrace opportunities around them. Its impressive evidence base includes improving attendance, which is of growing concern for schools reducing fixed term exclusions as well as improving health and wellbeing outcomes.”

Harry Kane commented: “I’m proud of the work my foundation has achieved over the last year and am excited that we will extend our reach and impact through a new partnership with Bounce Forward. Kate and I have worked closely with Bounce Forward to strengthen their curriculum. Together we have designed lesson plans that support young people to explore how resilience can help them recover from setbacks, deal with challenges and make the most of opportunities. We are supporting Bounce Forward because they are experts in their field and have developed evidence-based resources that align perfectly with our aim of promoting the benefits of positive self-belief and the connection between physical and mental health.”

Gravity’s Claire Pearce talks about economics and the environment for International Women & Girls in Science Day 

International Women & Girls in Science Day celebrates women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM). From the climate crisis to pandemics, women around the world are playing vital roles in solving the most pressing issues of our times.

In celebration, Heart of the South West‘s LEP is hosting a blog series featuring women from across the Heart of the South West’s STEM sectors. In this blog, Claire Pearce, Director of Planning and Economic Development at Salamanca Group, and Gravity in Somerset shares her journey as a woman in STEM.

Claire grew up in rural Pembrokeshire where her interest in the environment began, and went on to study geography, planning and sustainability and then business management at university, and has always had an interest in land.

Throughout her career, Claire has worked in consultancies on planning and transport where she developed skills in data, transport models and technical reports. She later moved to local government to develop her skills in public policy and places.

Claire is a Member of the Royal Town Planning Institute, the Institute of Economic Development, and Women in Property. Claire also mentors on the Reading University Real Estate course, and has mentored a female planning student from the University of West of England. Claire sits on the board as Governor at Bridgwater and Taunton College, providing a link to the college operations and board on sustainability, and also sits on the audit committee to scrutinise finance and risk.

“During the recession in the early 1990s, I really began to understand the reality of inflation, deprivation and the impacts of places on communities and individuals. Nothing was happening on the ground to help inject confidence into the market and stimulate investment to create jobs, so my years at Reading Borough Council during that time  were instrumental in shaping my solutions-orientated approach to creating the conditions for investment to facilitate regeneration.”

Claire has worked in the public and private sectors across planning, transport, economic development, real estate and sustainability. “This led me to leadership roles in local government and now the private sector, where I can bring together my experience in understanding a systems approach to places, leading multi-disciplinary teams to find solutions, attracting investment to regenerate sites and creating opportunities for communities and business.”

Before her current role, Claire worked as the Chief Planning Officer for Sedgemoor District Council which led the planning and implementation strategy for the Hinkley Point C nuclear build project. She is now Director of Planning and Economic Development for real estate and investment business Salamanca Group, which has a number of major projects including Gravity and Wildfox Resorts.

Gravity is a 616-acre enterprise zone in Somerset, regenerating a contaminated brownfield industrial site into a clean growth, advanced manufacturing campus creating up to 7, 500 jobs. It is a golden opportunity- a scarce site within a global marketplace –  with the potential to host a gigafactory – one of several the UK will require to respond to climate change and accelerate the transition towards a net zero economy. Gravity’s main priority is to now secure investors and high-quality occupiers aligned with their mission and commitment to clean and inclusive growth.

The ambition is to create social value by regenerating places and linking opportunities to communities to enable sustainable economic restructuring. Claire has led the project’s planning and economic development strategy, including the associated environmental assessments.

“Gravity has recently published its first reports on sustainability and social value to communicate progress. We have remediated a large-scale contaminated site and recycled thousands of tonnes of material to reuse. Alongside this, we have initiated work with Bridgwater and Taunton College on workforce planning and training, and have created a conservation project and worked with students from the college to create a new bat house.”

“Our project with MOBIE saw us promoting a design project in schools on place-making won by Alicia Ghio, Bounce Forward, an education charity supporting local schools on economic resilience and we are just entering a new phase of work, launching the Gravity Sphero initiative, which supports learning through play, gently encouraging boys and girls to explore coding and digital skills through football. Bridgwater United has an excellent women’s and football programme, and working with the Community Sports Trust we are linking sport to learning and future career opportunities.”

Claire was asked if she had any advice for women and girls pursuing STEM careers, She said: “There are so many diverse career opportunities, it is about working out what you like, and don’t like doing, going to see things through work experience, and finding areas of work to inspire, interest and motivate you.”

“The work opportunities in the future will need creative minds; people that want to learn, find solutions, and can be agile and resilient. It’s important to understand and develop emotional intelligence, and be open to ideas and opportunities to explore the world of STEM. Women think differently, so don’t be shy – the world is your oyster. Go for it!”

Read the rest of the blogs in Heart of the South West LEP’s Blog series here.

Gravity supplier ‘Stantec’ introduces Woolavington students to STEM opportunities

In December Gravity supplier, Stantec, visited Woolavington Village Primary School to challenge Years 3-6 pupils with its Gravity Green Bridge Lego STEM Activity.

The STEM activity introduced engineering to the Woolavington pupils, by using Lego to familiarise pupils to the construction of the ‘Green Bridge’ over Enterprise Way near Puriton and Woolavington. As well as introducing engineering as a career, the activity aimed to help build soft skills such as communication, creativity and teamwork.

During the 50-minute activity, Stantec introduced pupils to the bridge-building challenge using an interactive presentation giving them an insight into civil engineering and the Gravity ‘Green Bridge’. The pupils were split into smaller teams of 4-5. The session was split into  the Construction, Testing and Reflection stages.

The Woolavington students enthusiastically built their Green Bridges to span a road on their team mats. Using their problem-solving and teamwork skills, many exciting and creative bridge designs were constructed. Once the bridges were constructed, each team tested their bridge strength with a variety of weights and with a Hot Wheels truck which had to pass freely beneath the bridge.

The activity concluded with a short recap asking pupils what they had learned from the activity. Each of the teams then collected their “Outstanding Engineers” award certificates.

Claire Pearce, Director of Planning & Economic Development at This is Gravity commentedEncouraging young local talent into the world of STEM and its opportunities is critical to delivering long-term local employment opportunities at Gravity. Engagement with our suppliers such as Stantec to deliver these types of sessions in local schools is just part of Gravity’s wider approach to creating genuine social value.

Gravity supports the launch of local STEM initiative

Gravity Smart Campus is proud to have partnered with Bridgwater United FC and Community Sports Trust in launching the Gravity Sphero provision using Sphero Sports Robots, an innovative STEM education tool.

The launch event which was well attended by local schools, learning trusts, local and county councillors, charitable organisations, and local media who heard on the significant importance of this project from guest speakers Martin Bellamy (Chairman and CEO of Gravity), Andy Berry (Principal of Bridgwater & Taunton College), Adam Murry (CEO of BUFC) and Matt Mead (Sphero Sports).

Gravity Sphero launch attendees getting to grips with the technology

Gravity’s commitment to our Clean & Inclusive Growth, stimulating transformational change and enabling a new era of clean growth to create opportunities for local communities and business, is core to the success of the development.

Through implementing our Environmental and Social Governance policy, the Gravity team are focused on creating social value locally. The Gravity Sphero project launch marks the next step in our work, offering an innovative way for children and young people in the local area to learn coding and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) skills, supporting the delivery of the national curriculum

Uniting Football, Robotics and Educational STEM activities, inspires hands-on fun learning through practical football-based coding games with interactive and engaging programming activities, to teach key transferable and digital skills, already enjoyed by 40,000 educators and 3.5 million users worldwide.

Gravity and Bridgwater United Community Sports Trust have formed a partnership to give schools and young people the chance to join this fantastic and engaging movement.

Claire Pearce, Director for Planning and Economic Development at Gravity commented “The Gravity team is focused on generating genuine social value to make a real difference localy, supporting young people to strengthen personal resilience and inspiring them about future careers.

Looking ahead, the campus will host high-tech companies and new jobs so we must look ahead to how we can  build a local talent pipeline to access those opportunities. We therefore need to promote  STEM to help prepare students for the opportunities ahead and to provide them with the tools and skills to thrive and succeed.

We are delighted to support the Gravity sphero project and launch a new learning through play initiative with Bridgwater United Community Sports Trust. This is an important step towards growing a local workforce at Gravity – with our young people at its heart”

Commenting on this partnership Sarah Murry, Bridgwater United CST added “Since our first meeting with Gravity they have been a great supporter of the Trust as our visions for community partnership completely align. The synergy between the two organisations is very strong and we are delighted that with their support we can revolutionise the STEM education and play offering to children and young people in Bridgwater.”

Gravity is proud to enable Bridgwater United FC to become the only UK Non-League football club and the only club in the South-West Region to offer this innovative STEM programme.

This exciting new project, combines innovative technologies and sport to combat the recognised international shortage of STEM skills and young people going into STEM Careers – the STEM Gap.

For more information and to book your school taster session visit www.bridgwaterunitedcst.com/gravityspheros/ or contact Community@bridgwaterunitedcst.com

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