Carlogie Primary School – CETS

Name of school/project

carlogie cafe1Fairlogie Café – a young co-operative fair trade café in the first primary school to become a Scottish School of Co-operation.

The pupils also run their own credit union – Carlogie Smiley Savers Bank (supported by Angus Credit Union

Key Facts

Fairlogie Café was started by the P6 pupils at Carlogie Primary School who were studying Fairtrade as a topic. They decided they wanted to educate others about the benefits of buying Fairtrade products in their school and local community. Fairlogie was opened in Nov 2011 and is still run once a month from the local Church Hall.

How it developed

CETS and Carlogie Primary became a partnership in 2011, after the school had applied for one of CETS small grants to set up and run a pupil co-operative.

CETS visited the school to discuss the benefits of running a co-operative business, run by pupils, and after receiving their business plan, the grant was awarded.

What pupils gained and how effective the project was

fairlogie cafe evalThrough this enterprise project the children understood that the skills they learned were the skills they needed for their future lives. Their language skills were important e.g. to write letters or emails, to complete application forms for one of the Teams positions (Sales, Market Research, Advertising, Human Resources and Finance). The children were amazed how often they used their maths skills e.g. paying invoices, looking at profit and loss and working on the cash desk they learned how to give change. They explored the benefits of ethical trading in class and were then able to talk to the local community about the benefits of buying Fairtrade at their Café.

Is it sustainable?

fairlogie cafe rewardThis project has become sustainable through time. The pupils who started the café decided that the P6 pupils should run the café every year, with the P7’s offering training an support for them. It now attracts mother and toddler groups as well as the elderly and disabled as pupils have considered how best to cater for and attract these groups in their community and bring them together. This is now the 5th year that the café has been running and is much loved feature of the local community with announcements being made at the community council and church services as to when the café will be open. This has led pupils to offer “loyalty” cards to encourage return visits!

Did you involve other partners?

Other partners include local tax accountants who help with the books as well as the Angus Credit union who advise on finance and savings. The local police officers regularly drop in for coffee on café days and chat with pupils and find out what other support they can offer in an informal way.

Fairlogie entered the Schools Enterprise Challenge with their business plan and was the top in the UK and then won best business plan in Europe as well. This gave them £1000 which has helped to sustain and develop their cafe

Any other useful information

  • Fairlogie café project won Angus Ambassadors Youth Award in December 2013
  • STV heard about the café and came to film it and they were featured on national TV!

Links

http://www.scottishfairtradeforum.org.uk

http://teachamantofish.org.uk/school-enterprise-challenge

http://www.anguscreditunion.co.uk

Co-operative, Enterprise, Primary, Skills DevelopmentSkills for Life