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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Christopher Megrath

Eurovision project sees thousands of Liverpool schoolchildren take part

The Merseyside region has benefited from Eurovision's biggest-ever education programme, put together by Liverpool City Council's Culture Liverpool team as a part of their EuroLearn project.

Schools across Liverpool, Wirral, Sefton, Halton, St Helens and Knowsley were able to apply for grants of up to £2,000 to get into the Eurovision spirit and build a relationship with their Ukrainian friends and the wider European heritage in Liverpool.

A giant chessboard, a lip-sync battle and an art trail inspired by local and European art are among the 27 school projects across Liverpool City Region which have received EuroGrant funding to celebrate Eurovision.

READ MORE: Order your 48-page Eurovision souvenir guide from our online shop

The projects are a part of the EuroLearn programme which provides a unique opportunity for schools - and non-school educational settings - to celebrate all things Eurovision by taking part in and delivering their own events.

Among the successful schools is Our Lady of Compassion Catholic Primary School in Formby. Each class will represent a country taking part in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest and will be responsible for making local delicacies from their country which will be shared at a European street food market.

Early Years and Infant pupils will learn and perform a Eurovision song from their designated country, while Juniors will compose and perform an original song. The whole school will also perform the Beatles' classic Yellow Submarine to unite Liverpool and Ukraine through music.

The school’s Ukrainian teaching assistant will share symbols of Ukraine, such as the traditional clothing, flag and vinochok (flower crown). The school will also be running art workshops based on the Ukrainian national flower, the sunflower, to create Van Gogh inspired paintings and a collaborative mural with each child adding their own petal with their name to create a lasting legacy of 'The Class of Eurovision 2023.' Alongside this, the children will decorate plant pots using the Ukrainian colours of blue and yellow to plant our own sunflowers as a symbol of unity and hope.

To honour the link with Liverpool’s sister city, Odesa, the school will invite family members to teach children how to play chess on a giant chess board in the colours of the Ukranian flag. Each class will create a Liverpool themed and a Eurovision-themed chess piece, representing icons such as Conchita Wurst, Sam Ryder, a Superlambanana, or a Liver Bird, using design and technology skills to bring their plans to life.

St Charles’ Catholic Primary School in Liverpool will see pupils take on the roles of producer, director and pop star as they create music videos. From story-boarding and filming lip-sync battle style performances using green screen techniques to editing using cropping, trimming and splitting techniques and adding transitions, filters and captions, pupils will learn what it takes to put a music video together.

From a mural in Anfield and an art trail in Wirral to drama workshops in Stockbridge Village and filmmaking workshops in Widnes, there will be no escaping the Eurovision magic.

Full list of schools which have secured funding available here.

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