Nal’ibali and libraries: activating reading together

dc.audienceAudience::Audience::Libraries for Children and Young Adults Section
dc.conference.sessionTypeLibraries for Children and Young Adults
dc.conference.titleIFLA WLIC 2015 - Cape Town, South Africa
dc.conference.venueCape Town International Convention Centre
dc.contributor.authorBloch, Carole
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-24T08:36:25Z
dc.date.available2025-09-24T08:36:25Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractIn this paper I discuss the Nal’ibali reading-for-enjoyment campaign in relation to the role of libraries and librarians in South Africa. Nal’ibali aims to re-ignite a passion for storytelling and reading among adults and children as an urgent strategic intervention to transform children’s opportunities for becoming readers and writers. The campaign grows from the view that despite the fact that the majority of children continue to do really badly in school literacy learning, all children, and not only children of the English speaking elite can and should learn to become literate through personally meaningful and satisfying encounters with print. I will outline how Nal’ibali collaborates with libraries on events, training and support for reading clubs and offers materials in relevant languages as part of the campaign. Initiated by PRAESA in 2012 jointly with the DG Murray Trust, the campaign has begun to help inspire and motivate librarians to be the reading role models needed by children so that their language and literacy learning has a chance to flourish. I share ideas and challenges in the progress we are making as we nurture biliteracy and literary roots with libraries.en
dc.identifier.citationAlexander, N. 1999. English Unassailable but Unattainable: The Dilemma of Language Policy in South African Education PRAESA Occasional Paper 3 Cape Town, PRAESA, UCT. Barton, D. 1994. Literacy. An Introduction to the Ecology of Written Language. Malden Massachsetts: Blackwell Publishers Inc. Bloch, C. & Alexander, N. 2003. Aluta Continua: The Relevance of the Continua of Biliteracy to South African Multilingual Schools. pp 91-121. In Hornberger, N. (Ed) Continua of Biliteracy: An Ecological Framework for Educational Policy, Research, and Practice in Multilingual Settings. Clevedon:Multilingual Matters Ltd. Bloch, C. 2006. Theory and Strategy of Early Literacy in contemporary Africa with special reference to South Africa. PRAESA Occasional Papers 25. Cape Town, PRAESA, UCT. Bloch, C, Guzula, X, Nkence,N. 2010. Towards Normalising South African Classroom Life: The ongoing struggle to implement mother tongue based bilingual education. In Menken, K & Garcia, O, Eds. Negotiating Language education Policies: Educators as Policy Makers. Routledge. Cambourne, B. 1995. Toward an educationally relevant theory of literacy learning: Twenty years of inquiry. The Reading Teacher Vol. 49, No. 3 November 1995 Chall, J., Jacobs, V., & Baldwin, L. 1990. The reading crisis: Why poor children fall behind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Chall, J., & Jacobs, V. (2003, Spring). The classic study on poor children's fourth-grade slump. American Educator, 27(1). Retrieved at http://www.aft.org/newspubs/periodicals/ae/spring2003/hirschsbclassic.cfm Gaiman, N. 2013. Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming. Retrieved at http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/oct/15/neil-gaiman-future-libraries-reading-daydreaming Goodman, K & Goodman, Y. 2014. Making Sense of Learners Making Sense of Written Language: The Selected Works of Kenneth.S.Goodman and Yetta.M.Goodman. Routledge. Gottschall,J. 2012. The Storytelling Animal: How stories make us human. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Rogoff, B, Alcalá, L, Coppens, A.D, López, A., Ruvalcaba, O., & Silva, K.G. 2014. Children learning by observing and pitching-in in their families and communities. Special Issue, Human Development. Manguel, A. 2008. The Library at Night. Yale University Press. Pennac, D. 2008 The Rights of the Reader. Candlewick. Street, B. 1984. Literacy in Theory and Practice. Cambridge University Press.
dc.identifier.relatedurlhttp://conference.ifla.org/ifla81
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.ifla.org/handle/20.500.14598/5685
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAttribution 3.0 Unported
dc.rights.accessRightsopen access
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
dc.subject.keywordbiliteracy
dc.subject.keywordreading culture development
dc.subject.keywordmultilingualism
dc.subject.keywordchildren’s literature
dc.subject.keywordstories
dc.titleNal’ibali and libraries: activating reading togetheren
dc.typeArticle
ifla.UnitSection:Libraries for Children and Young Adults Section
ifla.oPubIdhttps://library.ifla.org/id/eprint/1282/

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