Leading publisher Pearson has backed Mail Force with a fantastic double donation.
The company is offering 250 laptops and £50,000 cash on top. Both donations will go straight into the campaign to get lockdown schoolchildren online.
Pearson, which publishes everything from pupils’ textbooks to educational resources for teachers and companies, pledged to add more laptops at a later date.
The firm employs more than 22,000 in 70 countries and is the latest corporation to back the Daily Mail’s Computers for Kids campaign, which has now raised an incredible £10.7million in the three weeks since it launched.
Andy Bird, chief executive of Pearson, said: ‘We are proud to support the campaign to provide laptops to children most in need across the UK.
Mail Force has been crisscrossing Britain making deliveries of laptops to schools. Among the most recent recipients is 12-year-old Eva Wielgosz (pictured)
‘Every child should be able to continue learning throughout this lockdown, and technology plays an increasingly vital role in achieving this with most learning now taking place virtually at home.’
He added: ‘We need to act quickly to ensure no one is missing out. We are determined to play our part in ensuring that the most vulnerable children have the tools they need to succeed and to ensure they are not unfairly disadvantaged.’
Mail Force, a charity set up last year to help tackle the PPE shortages, is buying new laptops and also refurbishing used ones donated by companies.
Generous readers have sent in an extraordinary £1.6million, and every penny is spent on helping children get online, by giving schools computers or assisting with data deals so they can access internet lessons.
Companies large and small have flocked to the cause. London advertising company AKQA has kindly sent in £2,000.
Chief executive Ajaz Ahmed said: ‘As the world’s fifth-largest economy, we have a responsibility to ensure disadvantaged children are equipped with the necessary resources to continue their education, access opportunities and enable digital literacy to help shape a better future.’
Eva’s mother Justyna (pictured together), who works in retail, and father Jozef, a handyman, welcomed the Mail Force delivery, as did squawking parrot Cookie
Mail Force has been crisscrossing Britain making deliveries of laptops to schools. Among the most recent recipients is 12-year-old Eva Wielgosz.
She shares a house with her parents, two siblings, a dog, a rabbit and a parrot – and getting any schoolwork done is a challenge.
Eva has been managing as best she can, but the family’s sole laptop has been commandeered by sister Misia, 15, who is in Year 11 and needs it for her GCSEs.
Eva, who is in Year 8, said: ‘It’s not easy. We use PowerPoint and Word at school, and I can’t do those things on a phone. Sometimes, it feels like it’s too tricky to get the work done.’
Her mother Justyna, who works in retail, and father Jozef, a handyman, welcomed the Mail Force delivery – as did squawking parrot Cookie and yapping Nicko the chihuahua, to the amusement of the family’s youngest child, Leon, seven. The rabbit Charli, was the only one who kept quiet.
Mrs Wielgosz said: ‘It has been very hard, because I work and my husband works as well. We manage, but it’s tough.
Pearson, which publishes everything from pupils’ textbooks to educational resources for teachers and companies, pledged to add more laptops at a later date. Pictured: Andy Bird, chief executive of Pearson
There are certainly arguments over the laptop. Misia gets it mostly. We are very grateful for this laptop and thank you very much.’
Amazon has also pledged to donate 10,000 new tablets to locked-down pupils.
The online giant was inspired to help with the haul, worth an estimated £500,000 at full price, after it was contacted by Mail Force last month.
The generous donation was sourced from equipment that would have been sold on its website.
Amazon will donate their tablets through their existing partner Teach First, a charity that trains and supports teachers in the most deprived areas of the country.
UK manager John Boumphrey said: ‘We’re proud to play our part in combating the digital divide. We hope these devices will support the immediate needs of children in disadvantaged communities across the UK.’