Slade's Noddy Holder goes back to school to teach Walsall teenagers

Noddy Holder takes a class at Alumwell Business & Enterprise College, Walsall
Noddy Holder takes a class at Alumwell Business & Enterprise College, Walsall

He’s a music legend used to performing in front of thousands of fans, but Noddy Holder faced his toughest audience yet when he had to teach a class full of teenagers in his home town of Walsall. Kat Keogh went along.

It’s not every day you find a glam rock star in a classroom.

Wearing a leather jacket and sporting a mop of famously unruly hair, Noddy Holder isn’t exactly teaching material. But the Walsall-born star revealed on a visit to his home town he could have ended up as a teacher had showbusiness not come calling.

The Slade frontman was one of 30 leading figures from the worlds of business, politics, media and entertainment who went back to school as part of a scheme to inspire pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds.

Noddy Holder takes a class at Alumwell Business & Enterprise College, Walsall

Holder, aged 64, took charge of a class of Year 8 pupils at Alumwell Business and Enterprise College for the scheme organised by education charity Teach First.

He admitted that despite decades on the stage, standing in front of 30 teenagers had been a “challenge”.

“Some of them were quiet, some a bit lippy to begin with, but they were a good group,” he said.

“Kids can be under the impression that everything will fall into their lap, so I talked to them about how I grew up in this area, that I was the son of a window cleaner and a school cleaner and had to graft year after year before I had any success.

“I wanted to instil in them they have to knuckle down even at the start of their career.”

Other guest teachers at schools across the country include Channel 4 news presenter Jon Snow and Sainsbury’s chief executive Justin King, who shared the secrets of their success at schools where at least half the children are from deprived backgrounds.

Recent research credits Teach First with improving exam results, showing schools with the charity’s teachers had seen pupils increase their grades by an average of a third of a GCSE in every subject they study.

Holder said he agreed to take part in the scheme to highlight the need for inspirational teachers.

He said: “I hate the thought that kids are always being told that if they can’t get to university, then their life is over and they are on the scrapheap.

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