Apprentices at the AMRC Training Centre pitch in to help those less fortunate

1 min read

​The AMRC Training Centre will be putting smiles on children’s faces this festive season with a special appeal to make sure those less fortunate have a present to open on Christmas Day.

The Rotherham-based training centre, part of the University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre, has spearheaded a local Christmas Gift Appeal by collecting unwrapped toys and gifts for babies, children and teenagers who might not otherwise receive a present.

Image: The AMRC Training Centre’s teaching and learning mentor, Chloe Fairman, launched the Christmas appeal with the help of apprentices

Apprentices kick-started the kind-hearted campaign by delivering leaflets to homes on the Waverley estate, asking residents to lend their support to the appeal by donating new, unwrapped and boxed gifts that can be distributed by social workers to children’s centres and those families most in need.

Examples of gifts wanted were books, Lego, board games, selection boxes, baby dolls, make-up, hats and gloves, toiletries, DVDs, jigsaws, puzzles, sticker/colouring books, soft toys and stationery.

The appeal has been organised by ‘good deed fairy’ Chloe Fairman, a teaching and learning mentor at the AMRC Training Centre, who says apprentices don’t just learn how to be great engineers, they learn how to be good citizens with the skills and confidence to contribute to their workplace and wider community.

“We’re teaching them that kindness matters just as much as your qualification,” Fairman said. “The apprentices were out and about delivering our gift appeal leaflets and posters to our neighbouring estates and businesses. They will also be helping to deliver the gifts directly to social care so that they can experience first-hand how the presents will benefit the young people of Rotherham this Christmas.”

She decided to set up the appeal in 2017, having spent 14 years working in a pastoral role in education with some of Rotherham’s poorest young people and their families.

“I understand the impact that Christmas can have on the mental health of a young person, if things aren’t quite right at home. There is such pressure to ‘fit in’ as a young person today and this, in turn, puts pressure on parents who may not have the funds to do it.

“Christmas is a time that can amplify all the issues that poverty can bring, and if even one tiny gift can make one family smile, then we’ve done our job.”

A drop-off point for donations was set up in the AMRC Training Centre reception and the gifts were delivered to Rotherham Social Care ready for distribution.