This is our last day on the APY Lands and we'll visit Yunyarini (or Kenmore Park) about 20km south-east of Pukatja.

We improvise a breakfast following an overnight power surge, pack our bags, jump in the truck and gun it over bumpy roads to our final school.

Pauly takes a short cut along a minor road past Black Hill, and mentions his failed attempt at taking it to Kenmore last time. 

We hope he knows what he's doing this time. 

Fortunately, we find ourselves turning into Kenmore Park after a half hour - as opposed to 50-minute trip.

The mix of children is again different here, this is by far the smallest and youngest group of kids we've had so far. 

After some shy introductions from the junior primary children, we go through a quick warm-up and start playing some handball games and then it's back into the classroom for the delivery of the program. 

One impressive thing about Kenmore Primary is the orchard at the back of the school. 

Water is pumped from the bore some distance away to irrigate the orchard, which grows fruits used for breakfast and other meals at the school canteen. 

We take the older students through the cultural awareness session of WillPOWER before the bell goes for a cup of tea. 

Playing footy, basketball and volleyball on the outside courts is a lot of fun and most of the little kids have come out of their shells after a timid start to the morning.

We've got a long trip back to Uluru - anywhere between three to four hours - so we need to head off just after lunch.

But not without a dance performance from the kids. 

A dance instructor comes to the school to work with the children from time to time, and Kenmore Primary finished second in the APY Lands dance competition last year; they're hoping to go one better in 2015.

Back into the car we go for the drive back to Uluru, where we'll rendezvous with Wade, Ross and Sasha and stay overnight ahead of our flights to Adelaide on Thursday.

It's been an insightful trip, particularly as a non-indigenous kid from suburbia being afforded the chance to see the work being done in some of the state's most remote communities. 

While most acknowledge the road to develop consistent and high attendance and education is a long one, the positive impact of many organisations in these communities is being felt. 

WillPOWER will continue throughout 2015 and going forward thanks to grants from state and federal governments and non-government organisations. 

Pauly and the WillPOWER team will deliver programs on a weekly basis into APY classrooms via video link from Alberton and wrap each semester with a local football carnival in Port Augusta and potentially Ernabella. 

As part of the program, school groups will design their own guernseys - many will feature the totems of their townships and homesteads - to represent their community.

It's all about making sport and school accessible and empowering for local kids, and to show that neither are mutually exclusive.

portadelaidefc.com.au will cover the WillPOWER program's roll-out in remote communities throughout 2015.