The Herald (South Africa)

Nal’ibali to focus on rural schools

Special campaign for Eastern Cape pupils

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NAL’IBALI, the national reading-for-enjoyment campaign, has partnered with the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAid) to bring the campaign’s approach to literacy developmen­t to select rural schools in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. Focusing on nurturing a love of reading for joy in English and vernacular­s to spark children’s potential and unlock their school learning, the schools initiative, titled “Story Powered Schools: A South African Reading Revolution”, is launching this month.

The Nal’ibali campaign is built on the simple logic that a well-establishe­d culture of reading can be a real game-changer for education in South Africa.

Nal’ibali managing director Jade Jacobsohn said: “Indeed, research has shown a direct link between reading for pleasure and children’s school success.

“We’ve seen evidence of this in the 1 120 reading clubs we work with across the country and are excited to be putting stories into the hearts of the classrooms that need them most.”

In South Africa, most children are not reading well.

Close to a third of children lack the literacy skills needed for daily living and school learning.

With most of these children living in rural areas, the Story Powered Schools drive will not only show these children new ways to experience books and stories, but demonstrat­e to teachers how motivation, confidence, writing and linking language to children’s real-life experience­s through reading for pleasure, can support curriculum objectives and increase children’s literacy developmen­t and school success.

This will better enable them to one day enter the workforce.

Endorsed by the Department of Basic Education and embedded in the broader Nal’ibali campaign, the project will work with 720 primary schools over three years.

Through a series of special training events, regular site visits and mentorship, as well as the provision of books, stories and other literacy materials in vernacular­s as well as English, school staff and community volunteers will be supported in bringing the compulsory reading period and literacy time included in the curriculum to life for children in classrooms of grades R to 4.

Broadening the project’s reach, these adults will be assisted in establishi­ng after-school reading clubs to allow children from other grades to enjoy reading activities and reap the benefits too.

Additional­ly, schools and their surroundin­g communitie­s will be encouraged to take part in special literacy events and competitio­ns run by the Story Powered Schools drive and supported by Nal’ibali at national and provincial levels each year.

“Nal’ibali is a growing wave of adults and children joining in to enjoy the power and magic of stories,” Jacobsohn said, noting the significan­t emotional and social benefits that reading and sharing stories with children can also have.

The schools initiative is poised to spread this special story power. It is estimated at training 14 640 adults, co-creating 2 160 reading clubs, directly reaching 172 000 children through classroomb­ased activity and indirectly reaching 200 000 children through events and the presence of supportive, informed and committed adults and teachers in their lives.

The intention is to keep growing a nation of empowered, literate citizens across South Africa.

Story Powered Schools is a Nal’ibali initiative endorsed by the Department of Basic Education and made possible by the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAid). Story Powered Schools aims to spark pupils’ potential and unlock their school success through reading and storytelli­ng by placing stories at the heart of classrooms and schools. For more informatio­n about the campaign or the power of reading and storytelli­ng, visit: www.nalibali.org and www.nalibali.mobi

 ??  ?? GETTING TO KNOW YOU: Pupils at a Nal’ibali reading club with their costumed reading coach
GETTING TO KNOW YOU: Pupils at a Nal’ibali reading club with their costumed reading coach
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