Cymraeg
  • Activities
  • Actions
  • Our schools
    View schools Scoreboards Compare schools
  • Our services
    For Schools For Multi-Academy Trusts For Local Authorities Energy audits Education workshops Pricing Training Case studies Newsletters Videos
  • About us
    Contact Team Blog Our funders Jobs Terms and conditions Privacy policy Child safeguarding School statistics
  • Support us
  • Netherton Infant & Nursery School
  • 70 points 32nd
  • Pupil dashboard
  • Adult dashboard
  • Enrol
  • Sign In
  1. Schools
  2. Together Learning Trust
  3. Netherton Infant & Nursery School

Appoint pupil energy monitors in all classes

Netherton Infant & Nursery School, Monday, 24 March 2025
5 Change-maker KS1, KS2, KS3, KS4, KS5

What you did

Design a mascot competition.

Activity description

Pupils - you can have a huge impact on the amount of energy that your school uses and the carbon it produces just by influencing the behaviour of other pupils and the adults in the school!

There are many ways to do this.  As well as creating an Energy Team of dedicated individuals who have responsibility for your overall Energy Plan, you can involve more pupils by appointing Energy Monitors for each class.  They can carry out a selection of monitoring activities on a regular basis such as:

  1. Spot checks of classroom temperatures
  2. Spot checks to see if lights / electrical items are left on at lunch time
  3. Spot checks to see if lights / IT are left on after school
  4. Spot checks of the school's thermostat settings
  5. Monitoring whether adults / pupils are wearing warmer clothes inside the school building during winter
  6. Monitoring whether outside doors / windows are closed during cold weather

Pupils of all ages can become  ‘detectives’ to see if lights, whiteboards and appliances have been left on unnecessarily, and reminding their friends and teachers to switch them off. When the school’s heating is switched on, pupils can be made responsible for checking that doors and windows are not left open. Depending on your school’s heating system, they may also be able to monitor classroom temperatures and ensure that thermostatic controls are used to ensure optimum temperatures for learning. 

Consider running these monitoring activities daily when you first start, and then move to weekly monitoring to ensure any improvements are maintained:

All these monitoring activities fit in with other Energy Sparks activities, so you can earn double points by appointing school energy monitors. 

All activities
We use some essential cookies to make Energy Sparks work. We'd also like to use analytics cookies so we can understand how you use the service and make improvements. Learn more

Quick Links

  • Activities
  • Actions
  • View schools
  • Scoreboards
  • Contact

Services

  • Energy audits
  • Education workshops
  • Training
  • Find out more
  • Book a demo
  • Case studies

Other Links

  • Jobs
  • Blog
  • School statistics
  • Datasets
  • Open data

Legal Terms

  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies
  • Child safeguarding policy

Newsletter Signup

Get the latest news from Energy Sparks in your inbox We'll never share your email with anyone else.
Content on this website is published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Licence.
Energy Sparks is a registered charity in England and Wales, registration 1189273.