The Earl of Wessex celebrates the success of the DofE in Scotland

Published

The Earl of Wessex visited Netherurd, Girlguiding Scotland’s home from home in the Scottish Borders, to see first-hand the difference how the The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award (DofE) is helping girls and young women to grow in confidence and discover new skills.

The Earl of Wessex visited Nertherurd as part of a tour celebrating the Diamond Anniversary of the DofE, which has helped to transform the lives of millions of young people in the UK and across the globe since it was founded in 1956. 

More than 900 Girlguiding Scotland members have achieved their Bronze, Silver or Gold Award over the last decade thanks to a partnership between the two youth charities. Girlguiding Scotland members welcomed His Royal Highness to Netherurd before  demonstrating their teamwork and communications skills on a Diamond Challenge ropes course, specially created for the day.  

Later in the day The Earl of Wessex met ScotRail staff at Fort William railway station to celebrate the Diamond Anniversary of The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award (DofE). The Earl  was welcomed by Phil Verster, before the two pedalled the first mile - on static bikes – of a 348-mile cycle challenge being undertaken by ScotRail’s apprentices as part of their Diamond Challenge. 

Achieving a Gold Award  with The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is a key component of ScotRail’s modern apprenticeship programme, with around 40 apprentices attaining the accolade since the programme began in 2011.  It consists of five elements, all undertaken throughout ScotRail’s apprenticeship programme: volunteering, physical, skills, expedition and residential.

Currently 11 apprentices – six engineers and five in customer service roles – are working towards the Award. 

To celebrate its 60th year, DofE has launched the DofE Diamond Challenge; a one-off initiative that allows people of all ages to take on a DofE inspired challenge and earn a limited-edition DofE Diamond Challenge pin.

For young people aged 14-24, undertaking a DofE Award offers a unique opportunity to grow as young adults, gaining valuable life experience while developing essential employability skills. Setting their own challenges and learning practical skills helps to prepare each individual for the world of work. This year, more than 20,000 young people across Scotland started their DofE Award, the highest ever intake across a 12-month period for the region.

As a Trustee and a Gold Award holder, The Earl of Wessex has championed the DofE for many years. As part of the Diamond Anniversary, His Royal Highness is travelling around the UK to help celebrate the hard work of DofE Volunteers, the successes of DofE participants, and he will also be joining participants as they undertake their own DofE Diamond Challenges. 

 

Related content

Feature

The Earl of Wessex visits Malaysia and Australia with The Duke of Edinburgh International Award

The Earl of Wessex visits Malaysia and Australia with the DofE International Award
News

Garter Day 2019

14 June 2019
News

Commonwealth Day 2018

12 March 2018
News

The Earl of Wessex visits India

05 February 2018
News

The Earl of Wessex in Derbyshire

27 September 2017
News

Holyrood Week 2017

06 July 2017

A speech by The Earl of Wessex at Bath Abbey, marking the 50th anniversary of the University of Bath

We have much to be thankful for and much to celebrate

26 October 2016
Feature

The Duke of Edinburgh's Award Diamond Challenge

Read about The Duke of Edinburgh's Diamond challenge, part of their 60th celebrations...
Feature

Receiving my Duke of Edinburgh's Gold Award at Buckingham Palace

Shannon's story of her day out to receive her Gold DofE Award at Buckingham Palace
Feature

How The Duke of Edinburgh's Award changed my life

Jon's transformation from a young man in prison to one with a stable future...