BOIDR raises 14,000 euros to improve reading skills for preschoolers in Moerwijk district

Bij Ons In De Residentie raised 14,000 euros last year with its networking dinners to improve reading skills of preschoolers at P. Oosterleeschool (Moerwijk).

 DSC1829

DATE

29 February 2024

TEXT

Annerieke Simeone

IMAGE

Fleur Beemster/Meike Liedenbaum

BOIDR raises 14,000 euros to improve reading skills for preschoolers in Moerwijk district

Bij Ons In De Residentie raised 14,000 euros last year with its networking dinners to improve reading skills of preschoolers at P. Oosterleeschool (Moerwijk).

Bij Ons In De Residentie (BOIDR) today (Thursday 29 February) handed over a cheque for 14,000 euros to director Mariska Wubben and a number of pre-school children from P. Oosterleeschool, a primary school in Moerwijk. The money will be used to improve the reading skills of these children - who often speak a different language at home.

(text continues below photos)

Presentation of value check P. Oosterleeschool Moerwijk

Presenting the value check to headmistress Mariska Wubben (left) and the kindergarten children of P. Oosterle School.    

With the donation, the headmistress has now bought a number of concrete resources, such as:

Wubben: "The BookaBooka cabinet is our newest acquisition. The nice thing about it is that children get their selected books read to them first in a language of their choice and then listen to the story in Dutch.

The BookaBooka cabinet.

Older children can also read stories on their own. It's a real success, we find. By offering it in their own language first, they then understand much better what the story is about."

P. Oosterleleeschool pre-reader improve reading skills At Our Residence

With the reading pen, children can slide over certain words in accompanying booklets, then hear from the pen how that word is pronounced.

Language gap

Editor-in-chief Annerieke Simeone is happy with the amount raised at four networking dinners held by The Hague-based media brand last year. "We chose this charity with care: it is Hague-based and it touches our field, namely language. Moreover, I know from experience what language deficits can do to people. My Italian father, who moved here in the 1960s, never really mastered the Dutch language. As a result, he had to rely on my mother for major life decisions, such as banking or mortgage matters. Those who speak a language well are less dependent. We wish the same for these Hague toddlers."

Eastern Reading School At Our Residence

The teacher shows the preschoolers a bilingual book.

Oosterlele School

Also in 2024, P. Oosterlele School is the charity of Bij Ons In De Residentie.

 

 

Last week's article in the AD in which editor-in-chief Annerieke Simeone explains the choice of this charity.

date 29 February 2024
text Annerieke Simeone image Fleur Beemster/Meike Liedenbaum

Bij Ons In De Residentie (BOIDR) today (Thursday 29 February) handed over a cheque for 14,000 euros to director Mariska Wubben and a number of pre-school children from P. Oosterleeschool, a primary school in Moerwijk. The money will be used to improve the reading skills of these children - who often speak a different language at home.

(text continues below photos)

Presentation of value check P. Oosterleeschool Moerwijk

Presenting the value check to headmistress Mariska Wubben (left) and the kindergarten children of P. Oosterle School.    

With the donation, the headmistress has now bought a number of concrete resources, such as:

Wubben: "The BookaBooka cabinet is our newest acquisition. The nice thing about it is that children get their selected books read to them first in a language of their choice and then listen to the story in Dutch.

The BookaBooka cabinet.

Older children can also read stories on their own. It's a real success, we find. By offering it in their own language first, they then understand much better what the story is about."

P. Oosterleleeschool pre-reader improve reading skills At Our Residence

With the reading pen, children can slide over certain words in accompanying booklets, then hear from the pen how that word is pronounced.

Language gap

Editor-in-chief Annerieke Simeone is happy with the amount raised at four networking dinners held by The Hague-based media brand last year. "We chose this charity with care: it is Hague-based and it touches our field, namely language. Moreover, I know from experience what language deficits can do to people. My Italian father, who moved here in the 1960s, never really mastered the Dutch language. As a result, he had to rely on my mother for major life decisions, such as banking or mortgage matters. Those who speak a language well are less dependent. We wish the same for these Hague toddlers."

Eastern Reading School At Our Residence

The teacher shows the preschoolers a bilingual book.

Oosterlele School

Also in 2024, P. Oosterlele School is the charity of Bij Ons In De Residentie.

 

 

Last week's article in the AD in which editor-in-chief Annerieke Simeone explains the choice of this charity.