Story
Our story
You can usually find us in one of two places - getting our sweat on, or curled up with a book in hand. We've decided to do something useful with the things that we love, and get active to help more children learn to read.
So we thought we'd do a trek. But then we thought that wasn't enough...
So we thought we'd do two treks. And then volunteer at a Nepalese school.
Trek 1: Hadrian's Wall Path. 90 miles in four days, coast to coast. Obstacles: surviving British summertime, the dark and dangerous towns of Newcastle, Carlisle and Once Brewed (ok, the last one isn't as bad...), carrying enough snacks.
Trek 2: A four day trek across the Helambu region of Nepal. Obstacles: temperatures of -10 at night, Earthquakes, tigers, carrying enough snacks.
The problem
- 60,000 children in England left primary school last year
(July 2015) unable to read and write properly. - Many of these children will never catch up. Left behind
at an early age, secondary school is an even greater struggle. They are four times more likely to truant and 5 times more likely to be excluded from school. - 8 million adults in the UK have no useful literacy- they
could not look up a plumber in the yellow pages, fill in a job application or even use the internet. - There are proven links between illiteracy and
unemployment, poverty, social exclusion and antisocial behaviour.
About Beanstalk
- They provide long term one-to-one support to
disadvantaged children aged between 6 and 11. - Beanstalk recruits volunteer reading helpers from the
local community, fully trains and supports them and places them in local primary schools. - Each reading helper works with three children and works
one-to-one with each child twice a week for a whole school year. - The sessions are designed to help children develop
reading, writing and communication skills in ways that are fun and spark their imaginations. They also improve confidence and self-esteem. - Beanstalk works through 17 area offices in the top 25%
most disadvantaged regions in England. They are currently supporting over 10,000 children through 2,900 reading helpers working in 1,400 schools. The 17 area offices are based in Birmingham & Warwickshire, the Black Country, Stoke & Cheshire, Shropshire, North East London, North West London, South East London, Inner London, West London, East Kent, West Kent, Northamptonshire, West Yorkshire, West Pennine, Durham, Manchester and Merseyside. - Beanstalk allows disadvantaged children to develop the
skills they need to become confident and literate for life; their support helps children to learn better in class and fulfil their potential in childhood and into adulthood.
How your magic beans can help
- Approximately £5 will pay for a week’s literacy support for a child who is struggling to learn to read.
- It costs Beanstalk just £305 to provide a year’s life-changing literacy support to a child in need who will receive on average 70 sessions.