£7 - 33,000 yearly
Number of Applicants
:000+
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JOB TITLE: Young Tree Champions London Living Labs: Project Lead
BASED: The Tree Council HQ in Canada Water, London SE16 with considerable flexibility to work from home
SCOPE: Engage schools with the Young Tree Champions London Living Labs programme with regular travel to schools within the GLA region
SALARY: £30,000 - £33,000 per annum
PENSION: 7% contribution by The Tree Council
TERMS: Full-time, two-year, fixed-term role with occasional weekend and evening work, starting August 2026, and finishing 31 July 2028, with potential for extension, subject to funding.
25 days annual leave, plus Public Holidays and the period between Christmas and the New Year.
REGION: Greater London
REPORTING TO: The Tree Council Head of National Schools Programme
INTERNAL LIAISON: National Schools Programme Manager, Communications Team, National Tree Warden Scheme Co-ordinator, Science & Research team, Community Planting and Grants team
EXTERNAL LIAISON: Programme partners, primary and secondary school teachers, PRUs, AP, SEND schools, community tree nurseries, volunteers and others.
Background
Young Tree Champions Living Labs is the latest addition to The Tree Council’s National Schools Programme (NSP). Since launch in 2020, the NSP has become one of the largest environmental education programmes in the UK with over 5,000 schools actively taking part.
The programme has, to date, comprised two elements: a practical, large scale, light touch programme called ‘Orchards for Schools’ and a core multi-faceted campaign ‘Young Tree Champions (YTC). Following confirmation of additional London-wide funding through a new partnership with the GLA,‘YTC London Living Labs’ is an exciting new, London-focused, development of Young Tree Champions.
YTC London Living Labs has an inclusive approach to working with underrepresented groups, targeting approximately 50 schools and their communities that are most impacted by climate and nature challenges, which have a wider correlation with social deprivation.
The project aims to inspire children and young people of all ages and abilities to lead the way in assessing climate and nature risks in their school grounds, by mapping a baseline of climate related hazards (heat, drought, flooding, pollution - noise/air particulates), and scoring the likely impact.
Students will work with nature to implement a plan to mitigate exposure to these hazards through the introduction of green infrastructure measures (tree growing and planting of new species, rainwater harvesting/irrigation, onsite composting/mulching, sustainable drainage, green walls etc).
This process brings many benefits for students and nature, including exciting work-related skills and knowledge progression across multiple subjects, improved health, well-being and a contribution to the school’s wider sustainable development.
Following our established YTC framework the programme provides high quality teacher training and pupil workshops (online and in-person), plus resources and funds for physical infrastructure to help teachers and pupils tackle the climate and nature emergency.
Schools will enable their pupils to grow a deep-rooted connection with trees and nature through the growing and caring of trees and other green infrastructure. Gaining regular access and contact time with nature, they will develop the confidence, knowledge and skills needed to explore a career in the environment sector.
Schools will have opportunities to share and inspire others to transform their school grounds across London and nationally, leading to a tree-filled, healthy, more sustainable and just future for schools.
Why trees and children?
Trees are incredible organisms that humanity and all life on earth depends upon - revered by cultures for thousands of years. They provide the oxygen we need to breathe, offer homes for more than 75% of species on the planet, and help stabilise our global climate so life can thrive on earth. Trees even have the power to change the way we feel and think and are universally recognised as a crucial mitigating factor in the fight against the climate and nature emergencies. Trees and nature are inextricably linked to the future of children and young people.
What we are looking for in our team members
RESPONSIBILITIES OF LONDON LIVING LABS PROJECT LEAD
Support operations and delivery of YTC London Living Labs until project end date (July 2028).
Engagement and face-to-face delivery in schools
Wider school engagement
Comms and marketing
Health and Safety
THE TREE COUNCIL - WHO WE ARE
The Tree Council is a national charity (charity no. 279000) and umbrella body bringing everyone together with a shared mission to care for trees and our planet’s future. We inspire and empower organisations, government, communities and individuals with the knowledge and tools to create positive, lasting change at a national and local level.
We inspire people to plant and care for trees – the trees in your city street, your local park or school playground, in orchards and hedgerows and rural pastures around the UK. (Other charities focus on forests and larger woodlands.) We celebrated our 50th anniversary in 2024.
Our work beyond our National Schools Programme includes:
Support for a network of thousands of volunteer Tree Wardens who help plant and establish trees in communities across England, Scotland and Wales.
An annual community programme, which connects people with trees and the natural world, including ‘National Tree Week’ at the end of November, which celebrates the start of the winter planting season.
A grants programme that helps schools and other groups fulfil their vision to grow and plant trees, orchards and hedgerows.
Science and social research programme in partnership with Defra, Forestry Commission, Fera Science and top UK universities.
An important relationship as a ‘critical friend’ to Network Rail. We advise on vegetation management along 20,000 miles of railway corridors and are delivering a £1.2m community planting programme in partnership with Network Rail.
Partnership with our 120 Member organisations including other charities, academic partners and our generous supporters (businesses, major donors, Trusts & Foundations).
YOUR APPLICATION
PLEASE SEE ALSO THE ATTACHED DOCUMENT WHICH HAS FURTHER DETAILS
If you wish to apply, please provide a CV (maximum 2 pages A4) and cover letter (maximum 2 sides A4) outlining your experience, skills and personal attributes that demonstrate your ability to inspire and engage schools with our Young Tree Champions programme.
Please submit your application by midnight on Sunday 21 June 2026. Interviews will be held w/c 29 June. The contract will begin from 17 August (subject to availability and references).
Acceptable Use - Artificial Intelligence (AI) We understand that candidates may choose to use AI tools to support their job applications - for example, to help structure or edit written responses. We welcome the use of AI in this way, particularly where it helps improve accessibility, such as for neurodivergent applicants. However, personal writing can often convey enthusiasm, energy and character better than AI so please bear this in mind. During interviews, candidates will be expected to respond independently without the use of AI tools.
Pre-employment checks for the successful candidate will include:
Enhanced DBS check
Two professional references
Verification of ‘Right to Work in the UK’
The Tree Council is an equal opportunities employer. We welcome applications from everyone regardless of age, disability, gender, ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation.
Registered Charity No. 279000
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