Virtual reality headsets teach children about railway safety: School girl wearing VR headset

Thursday 8 Dec 2022

Virtual reality headsets teach children about railway safety

Region & Route:
North West & Central
| North West & Central: North West

Virtual reality is now being used by Network Rail to teach school children about the dangers of trespassing on the railway.

The goal is to drive down the number of railway trespass incidents in the North West by combining sport and railway safety sessions using the high-tech headgear.

Since November 2021 there have been 2,127 trespass incidents across Network Rail's North West route.*

Between March 2021 and March 2022 there were 19,408 trespass incidents on Britain's rail network - with a quarter of those involving under 18s.

To tackle those numbers Network Rail has teamed up with the Stockport County Community Trust to work with young people in Greater Manchester.

Since the summer the two organisations have been working together to encourage healthy play and railway safety awareness**.

Chris McLaughlin, Network Rail community safety manager, said: “There’s a real buzz from the children when they use the headsets, and however hard I try I never get a reaction like that from my Powerpoint presentations. Combining the lessons with the football sessions feels like we’re onto a real winner.

“Working with a sporting team like Stockport County Community Trust has so much more influence and it really helps us to deliver our important railway safety message alongside an agency which people already respect, love and trust.”

Matthew Bailey, Stockport County community partnership manager, said: “It’s great to be teaming up with Network Rail so we can both promote the work we do for local communities. The feedback we’ve had so far from schools and groups taking part has been really positive, with the virtual reality and football mix proving to be a real hit with the children.”

The latest session took place at Dial Park Primary School, when 45 year 6 children received their important safety lesson.

James Clarke, headteacher at Dial Park Primary, said: “It’s been great to see the children really engage with these lessons and even though they’re in the safety of the classroom they can be transported to a potentially dangerous place to see for themselves what the consequences could be. I’m certain it’s a lesson the children will never forget and they now know the railway is not a place to trespass for any reason.”

The students were shown two different scenarios through the headsets leading up to a dangerous outcome.

This included being in the train cab with a driver as they approached a trespasser on the track, and then from the perspective of a group of teenagers leading up to one of them touching electrified steel rails on the ground which power trains.

This is what three of the children thought:

Tyler said: “It felt cool but when the train was coming it felt scary at the same time. It’s just dangerous you can get hit by a train or you can get electrocuted.” 

Samara said: “I thought it was really cool technology and it felt like you were in the real place.”

Jessica said: “What I learned was don’t trespass on the railway, it’s dangerous you could end up in hospital, don’t do it.”

The sessions form part of the rail industry’s joint You Vs Train campaign to discourage young people from going on the railway.

This autumn saw a powerful new video launched called Harrison’s story – about 11-year-old Harrison Ballantyne who tragically lost his life when he was electrocuted by overhead power cables after straying into a rail freight depot to retrieve a lost football.

For more educational resources on railway safety and information on Network Rail’s community safety programme visit: https://www.networkrail.co.uk/communities/safety-in-the-community/safety-education/

Notes to Editors

*Network Rail's North West route

The North West route runs from Cheshire in the south to Merseyside, Greater Manchester, Lancashire and Cumbria in the North.

Major stations across the route include Crewe, Liverpool Lime Street, Manchester Victoria, Manchester Piccadilly, Bolton, Preston, and Carlisle. The route is home to the two Northern Powerhouse cities of Liverpool and Manchester, as well as the tourist destinations of Blackpool and the Lake District.

The North West route is part of the North West and Central region.

**Network Rail and Stockport County Community Trust partnership

Network Rail and Stockport County Community Trust are collaborating for 12 months to deliver a variety of projects to support rail safety in the local community.

Funded projects include:

Summer Holiday Free School Meal Programme    

The Network Rail community safety team will deliver a variety of different projects during the summer holidays at the free school meal holiday provision. Providing virtual reality units to the group to help them understand the dangers of playing on rail tracks. A Rose Hill Marple train station will display posters designed by the group with positive messages.

Educational Workshops

Workshop to raise awareness of rail safety to children in years 6 across Brinnington, Hazel Grove, Town Centre, and Reddish.

The Under 13s Switched On To Rail Safety Cup

The under 13s Switched On To Rail Safety Girls Cup aims to provide girls in Stockportwith free football provision and give them the opportunity to represent their schools. 

Match Day Visits

Over the course of the season Network Rail will be providing junior supporters in the Together Stand with various activities pre match along with distributing goody bags.

Contact information

Passengers / community members
Network Rail national helpline
03457 11 41 41

Latest travel advice
Please visit National Rail Enquiries

Journalists
Network Rail press office - North West & Central Region
07740 782954
NWCmediarelations@networkrail.co.uk

About Network Rail

We own, operate and develop Britain's railway infrastructure; that's 20,000 miles of track, 30,000 bridges, tunnels and viaducts and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations. We run 20 of the UK's largest stations while all the others, over 2,500, are run by the country's train operating companies.

Usually, there are almost five million journeys made in the UK and over 600 freight trains run on the network. People depend on Britain's railway for their daily commute, to visit friends and loved ones and to get them home safe every day. Our role is to deliver a safe and reliable railway, so we carefully manage and deliver thousands of projects every year that form part of the multi-billion pound Railway Upgrade Plan, to grow and expand the nation's railway network to respond to the tremendous growth and demand the railway has experienced - a doubling of passenger journeys over the past 20 years.

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