The 17-year-old’s basketball jerseys, clothes, posters and bedsheets are just how he left them.
"What we're looking for is for kids to be kind and to help each other," Mr Baker said."It's a fitness class with a bit of boxing involved, but it's a class encouraging kids to encourage each other, to basically be kind."
A spontaneous community clean up of a town river has taken place after pictures of rubbish in the water went viral on social media.Bridgwater resident, Ben Bishop, said he was "shocked" to see the state of the River Parrett in the town, with old shopping trolleys and other debris visible in it.He posted a picture to a local community group and people came together on the Friday before the bank holiday weekend to remove the junk.
Mr Bishop said: "I just couldn't believe the amount of rubbish".Mr Bishop said he felt it was "his duty" to clear up the river and posted on social media to see if he could get others to help.
And while he and other volunteers were getting stuck in, others who were walking by "rolled up their sleeves" to help.
Mr Bishop said: "The post was getting hundreds of reactions and riled people up - lots of residents wanted to help.In Sussex, the schools chosen to pilot the scheme are:
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said the breakfast clubs would have a "transformative impact on the lives of children".She added that the scheme aimed to break the link "between background and success" by initially targeting the most disadvantaged areas in the UK.
If the pilot is successful, plans for a national expansion could begin later this year.The headteachers' union welcomed the expansion of breakfast clubs, which some schools already run, but expressed concerns that funding would fall short of the cost.