Reading: The Key to Development and Community Worldwide

 

In honor of World Read Aloud Day, and to share profound insight into the state of literacy worldwide, Susan M. Blaustein, the Director of the Millennium Cities Initiative, wrote a powerful blog for the Huffington Post. 

"In an early celebration last week of World Read Aloud Day in Kisumu, Kenya's third largest city, the Millennium Cities Initiative (MCI) and Kisumu public school teachers made the rounds of a number of primary schools where we now have Girls' LitClubs, thanks to the New York-based, literacy-focused non-profit LitWorld. As planned, schoolgirls all over Kisumu, including those in a school on the grounds of the local women's prison, recited prepared poems, read stories aloud and sang and danced, all to celebrate literacy.

What our team did not anticipate was the keen desire on the part of the women prisoners themselves to read aloud -- which they did, not just with their wardens' permission, but together with their wardens, page by page, story after story. As our merry troupe of teachers and development practitioners traipsed down the path to and from the prison and school bearing their colorful "World Read Aloud Day!" placards, a woman cooking and selling "chips" (fries) by the side of the road asked whether she, too, might have the chance to read. Our group, eager to get to their appointment on time inside the prison grounds, stopped on the way back so that the woman could read out loud to them."

Read the full article on the Huffington Post.


World Read Aloud Day: Building a Worldwide Literacy Community

 

"Today is World Read Aloud Day. Before the day is over, hundreds of thousands of people will participate in one of the most precious shared human experiences.

Last week I delivered a keynote speech to an audience of educators titled "Creating a Worldwide Literacy Community." And today, by celebrating World Read Aloud Day, this worldwide literacy community is what we are building together.

When you read aloud today, you are standing up for every person's fundamental right to read. And while today many thousands of people join us in this advocacy, the change we create will happen because we are linking our voices together with many small moments, in local libraries, under a tree, in the car on the way home from school."

Read Pam's full article on the Huffington Post.


World Read Aloud Day in the New York Daily News

LitWorld's Founder and Executive Director Pam Allyn shared the history and the future of World Read Aloud Day with the New York Daily News. We dream of a worldwide literacy community and look forward to raising our voices with friends around the world tomorrow when World Read Aloud Day 2013 arrives.

"A wide-eyed, 7-year-old El Barrio boy who had never in his life heard a book read aloud to him provided the inspiration for World Read Aloud Day, the global literacy campaign that kicks off on Wednesday in Harlem.

The child was in a foster-care program when Pam Allyn opened up a copy of Maurice Sendak’s 1963 classic “Where the Wild Things Are,” and began to read about the adventures of a young boy named Max.

As Allyn tells the story, the child finally said, "I wish everybody could do this every day!"

Read the full article here.

LitWorld and World Read Aloud Day Featured on NY1 New

This weekend LitWorld's Innovation Developer, Yaya Yuan, was a guest on NY1 News, Time Warner Cable's 24-hour newschannel in New York City witih a viewership of 2,100,000.

 

Yaya gave viewers a preview of the World Read Aloud Day celebration we have planned for Wednesday as well as LitWorld's mission which drives our work year round. Click here to watch the interview, and don't forget to register for World Read Aloud Day and let us know how you plan to Read It Forward on March 6.

New HuffPost Blog: Share the Gift of Story on World Read Aloud Day

 

Pam's latest HuffPost Blog is about the joy, the power, and the magic of reading aloud that will be celebrated around the world on March 6, World Read Aloud Day.

"One of my favorite read aloud memories is my mother reading the Little House on the Prairie books to me. I just adored those books. The coziness of their lives in spite of so much hardship and hard work, and the closeness of the family life always made me so happy. And my mother's voice was so calm and clear, so precise and measured. It was the perfect complement to these books, which valued the daily moments of everyday life and honored them.

During my many years as a literacy educator, I've had the privilege of witnessing the powerful yet nuanced effects of reading aloud. Like my own memories, reading aloud delivers a deep comfort for a child. In stories, they find a safe place to return to, and tools to navigate life. Books provide a risk-free environment to grapple with the world's big questions."

Read the full piece on the Huffington Post.

World Read Aloud Day is 2 Weeks Away!

World Read Aloud Day is a day to connect with another person through the joy of reading together. Now is the time for the entire community to get involved in WRAD to make reading visible to the world. The simplest, easiest thing you can do to invest in a child's future is to read aloud to her.

We are busily planning our New York celebration and we invite you to join us at the final stop on our WRAD Bus Tour at Books of Wonder. Our grand finale will include special guest author read alouds and a performance by the Story Pirates. Full details here.

Get to know our network of WRADvocate Partners and Ambassadors who are spreading the Read It Forward movement far and wide by mobilizing their communities for WRAD. Visit the WRAD blog often to see the great global initiatives lead by our reading rockstars around the world.

Help spread the World Read Aloud Day movement on social media. Join our Facebook event and use the WRAD logo as your avatar.