Get on your bike for Cycle to School Week!

Boy cycling through city centre

Kent County Council (KCC) is urging schools and families across Kent to back Cycle to School Week (25th-29th September 2023) and encourage children to use pedal power safely to get to classroom.

Cycling is great for fitness and wellbeing – and green.

Organised by the Bikeability Trust in partnership with cycling charity Sustrans, this year’s national campaign is asking pupils, parents and teachers to make one of four cycling pledges on Bikeability’s website.

The four pledges to choose from are:

  1. Swap one car journey for cycling
  2. Cycle to school everyday
  3. Discover somewhere new on your cycle, or
  4. Go on a cycle ride with family.

Those making a pledge on the website also get entered into the Bikability prize draw to win a brand new Frog children’s bike.

Bike touring organisation Cycling UK says a little over 2% of UK children cycle to school while over a third (35.4%) are driven – despite the average journey to school being 2.4 miles.

And Bikeability, who run cycle training for schools, calculate that if just one child pedalled to school instead of travelling in the car for a year, it would cut congestion and save almost half a tonne in carbon dioxide emissions: That’s equivalent to growing eight trees for a decade, or charging over 58,000 mobile phones.

Children, including in Years 5 and 6 are ready to cycle to school by themselves, or with friends, once they’ve completed their Bikeability Level 2. Level 2 teaches skills needed to cycle confidently and safely on the road.

Councillor Dan Watkins

Cycling is fun and makes you fitter, healthier and happier

Dan Watkins Kent County Council Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care and Public Health

Kent County Council Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care and Public Health, Dan Watkins, said: “Cycle to School Week is a fantastic opportunity to inspire children to learn how to ride a bike and for families to switch four wheels for two for the school run.

“Cycling is fun and makes you fitter, healthier and happier. It also boosts confidence and concentration, which helps hugely with learning.

“For all these reasons KCC, together with Active Travel England, is working hard to encourage and enable more journeys in and through Kent to be made by walking, cycling and wheeling.

“Kent has at least 1,421km of on and off-road cycle paths and families can download the free Kent Connected app on their phones to discover cycling routes near them.”

KCC is helping improve opportunities for children to cycle through a range of initiatives, including by:

  • supporting schools with access to Bikeability’s national standard cycle training – so young people from primary through to secondary learn how to ride a bike safely.
  • working with schools that want to go that step further to develop a School Travel Plan – identifying ways to help staff and pupils to cycle and use active travel methods. This could include installing cycle and scooter storage, welly sheds and shower facilities
  • funding Kent Road Safety videos – about the best way to get kids excited about cycling as a life skill and bike maintenance, and
  • encouraging school leaders to encourage pupils and parents to swap one car journey for a cycle trip.
Dan Watkins with his bike on a country road

Keen cyclist Cabinet Member Dan Watkins on a KCC charity bike ride  earlier this summer

KCC is helping improve opportunities for children to cycle through a range of initiatives, including by:

  • supporting schools with access to Bikeability’s national standard cycle training – so young people from primary through to secondary learn how to ride a bike safely.
  • working with schools that want to go that step further to develop a School Travel Plan – identifying ways to help staff and pupils to cycle and use active travel methods. This could include installing cycle and scooter storage, welly sheds and shower facilities
  • funding Kent Road Safety videos – about the best way to get kids excited about cycling as a life skill and bike maintenance, and
  • encouraging school leaders to encourage pupils and parents to swap one car journey for a cycle trip.
Head and shoulders image of Neil Baker, KCC's Cabinet Member for Highways and Transport

Learning to cycle has so many benefits for youngsters

Neil Baker KCC Cabinet Member for Highways and Transport

KCC Cabinet Member for Highways and Transport, Neil Baker, said: “Learning to cycle has so many benefits for youngsters and ensuring they are able to do this safely on Kent’s roads is essential.

“That is why we invest in making sure we support the schools that want to promote walking and cycling as a means to get to and from school. This includes helping to build School Travel Plans, providing educational material tailored to the age of the children and making information available on the best route to take.”