For the last six years, teacher and social media sensation Kit Brown has been inspiring pupils at schools in Hertfordshire.
Since beginning his classroom career, Kit has used free resources available through the Premier League Primary Stars programmme, which is delivered by the Premier League Foundation and uses the appeal of football to inspire children to be active and develop essential skills.
Kit is a passionate advocate for how the programme supports teachers, engages children and sparks discussions and conversations in the classroom.
And so when he was invited to talk about Premier League Primary Stars at last week's celebration event marking the 15th anniversary of the Premier League Foundation, he jumped at the chance.
Here's what he thinks of the Premier League's primary school education programme.
Kit Brown, Year 4 teacher, Peartree Spring Primary School
"Premier League Primary Stars means a lot to me - it's a special, special programme. It's something that I have used from the very first year I started teaching. It's been ever-present in my planning. To me it means impact, opportunity, difference and lessons in life.
"I have seen the real impact that it's made in the classroom and on the children that I've taught.
"I have not taught a more impactful lesson than the one that I taught on diversity from the Premier League Primary Stars resources. The conversations I had in my class with the children, the work that they produced and the impact that that had on playground behaviour and friendships was just incomparable.
"For our children, it's real life lessons that stray far beyond the curriculum.
"Premier League Primary Stars goes into so many different strands for teachers and it's the empowerment of picking up the programme's resources and being able to confidently deliver lessons that are engaging and fun.
"It's easy for us to look at the Premier League and look at the glitz and the glamour of the footballers and the best league in the world but underneath that is a real organisation that cares about making a difference.
"The Premier League has a huge influence. You see the badge, the footballers, the teams associated with it, the coaches coming in from your local clubs, and it has that sense of awe and wonder about it.
"I'm thinking about a particular group of boys in my class, reluctant readers. They wouldn't pick up a reading book for love nor money. And the moment we had some Premier League Primary Stars books in my reading corner, every single day they would go directly over to those books.
"Seeing a pupil that didn't want to read but is now showing an interest in reading is why we do the job that we do, for those moments.
"We did another lesson last year on allyship and it was to do with the boys being real allies towards the girls, encouraging girls to think about football and joining in and participating. The Premier League donated kits to our girls, it was incredible.
"Going on my lunch duty and seeing the boys playing alongside the girls, that was a byproduct of the incredible lessons that we shared together.
"It's a feeling you can't quantify, it's never going to be on a spreadsheet. For a corporation as big as the Premier League to be so dedicated, implementing resources that make a difference in the classroom, only positive things are only going to happen as a result of that.
"That's what Premier League Primary Stars does, whether it's maths, English, PE, PHSE, we are providing these children with real life lessons that they can lead into their lives and be positive, contributing members of society.
"I've been so lucky to work with so many incredible people and I have seen the difference that it's made in my school, in our community.
"Seeing the work that they do across our country and across the world is genuinely incredible. To be a small cog in the whole factory of work is brilliant.
"I just want everyone to realise the sheer impact that it is having. The number of schools that are delivering Premier League Primary Stars is astounding.
"Teaching, in general, is a very hard profession, and teachers are crying out for resources that we can pick up easily, deliver, feel empowered to deliver confidently and competently - and that's what Premier League Primary Stars does.
"The work of the Premier League Foundation is making a difference. As a teacher who sees it every day, these are the things we need in our classes. Our children need these experiences. I can't thank you enough."
What is Premier League Primary Stars?
Premier League Primary Stars is available to every primary school in England and Wales. More than 1.3million school sessions and events have already been delivered.
Funded by the Premier League, through the Premier League Foundation, the programme has enabled over 75,000 teachers to use resources for English, PSHE, PE and Maths, to help children to be active and develop essential life skills. There are 650+ free resources available.
More than 100 professional football club charities from the National League to the Premier League run in-classroom Premier League Primary Stars sessions in local schools, with over 18m attendances by primary school pupils.
To find out more about delivering the programme in your school, please visit plprimarystars.com.