Through the Raising Readers Initiative, Worldreader is targeting children aged between 3-8 years from under-served communities in rural and urban areas whom it seeks to empower so that they may develop a culture of reading daily.
Worldreader’s Regional Director East Africa Joan Mwachi announced this initiative at the St. Elizabeth Primary School Mukuru in Nairobi today during an occasion to commemorate International Literacy Day.
Living Legends I Literature scholar Prof Wanjiku Mukabi Kabira
The Raising Readers Initiative will promote reading for understanding and critical thinking among children and encourage parents to build new habits of reading with their children and support child outcomes through dialogic reading. The initiative will also empower teachers/facilitators to promote reading to the community and at home using technology.
Joan Mwachi regretted the inequitable distribution of education at the moment which disadvantaged children from financially challenged backgrounds. “Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the world was already in the midst of a global learning crisis. But as of 2021, 387 million children worldwide lack reading proficiency. Education is not equitably distributed. Those children in the lowest socio-economic tiers have much less access to education and lower learning outcomes, setting them up for a lifetime of learning poverty and economic needs.”, she said.
She said readers tended to create a better world and hence there was a need for concerted efforts by various stakeholders, including parents, teachers, provincial administrators, healthcare workers, schools and education programs, community-based organizations, churches, mosques, and libraries among others to bring reading opportunities to all children.
During the event participants, who included representatives from the Kenya National Library Services, pupils, teachers, and the local community were introduced to BookSmart, an easy-to-use free app from Worldreader through which children can access a library of culturally relevant digital books in 5 languages and gain access to quality reading and learning materials in school or at home to help maintain their learning outcomes and become lifelong readers and informed decision-makers
International Literacy Day is commemorated annually on the 8th Sept of ember to remind the public of the importance of literacy as a matter of dignity and human rights, and to advance the literacy agenda towatowardore a literate and sustainable society. The theme for the 2022 International Literacy Day is Transforming Literacy Learning Spaces: Exploring Opportunities and Possibilities.