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Posted: 2016-05-17T22:30:20Z | Updated: 2016-05-17T22:31:11Z

Fifth-graders at Public School 112 in Brooklyn, New York, were handed mock police badges Tuesday morning instead of name tags or gold stars. Rather than rattling off the Pledge of Allegiance, they followed New York City Police Commissioner Bill Bratton in reciting a pledge to "study hard, to work hard, to obey my parents, to work with my teachers and to always try to do good."

They also took on the title of "junior New York City police officers for the day."

NYPD officers visited 340 elementary schools across the city to participate in team-building exercises with children. The visits were part of Team Up Tuesday, a new initiative to encourage positive relationships between children and local law enforcement.

Dozens of police officers greeted students at P.S. 112 on Tuesday morning, as did Bratton and New York City Education Commissioner Carmen Faria. The two leaders spent time reading stories to groups of kids, and other students participated in outdoor activities led by uniformed police officers.

Bratton told students that teachers and local police officers "need to work together to keep you safe so you can come to school and learn in a safe environment."

"We need you working together with us, to keep the city safe, to keep your schools safe, to keep your neighborhood safe," he added.

Bratton told reporters at P.S. 112 that local police officers often visited his school when he was a child, and that it helped inspire him to go into law enforcement.

Although there aren't specific plans for future Team Up Tuesdays, Faria said she expects to see more activities designed to foster strong relationships between students and law enforcement in the city.