Nurturing Readership Skills in the Digital Age: Contributions of the Reading Tent Project in Njoro, Kenya
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17821/srels/2003/v40i3/48951Keywords:
Reading Tent Project, Egerton University, Elementary Reading Skills, Information Technology Skills, Computers and Leisure Reading, Rural Primary Schools, Njoro Division, KenyaAbstract
The Reading Tent Project (RTP) was instituted in November 1999 as an outreach programme of the Research and Extension Division at Egerton University in Njoro, Kenya. The project, which is funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, aims at promoting a lifetime reading culture and improving pupils' reading skills. A control group of 1567 pupils currently in classes 4 and 5 from ten selected rural primary schools within Njoro Division was closely monitored for three consecutive years. R.T.P events involved teaching elementary reading skills interspersed with educational games, modelling, drawing and painting. The project supplemented reading activities with introduction to information technology (IT) involving computers with associated accessories, assorted educational CD-ROM "talking books ", email and the Internet. Through guided exploratory sessions, improvement in the reading habits of the pupils was manifested. Moreover, through the project, some pupils established electronic links to friends abroad to share scarce educational resources. This paper exemplifies a case that developing countries can use to prepare their young citizens for an information-intensive future, thus bridging the digital divide.Downloads
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Makenzi, M., Ongus, R. W., & Nyamboga, C. M. (2014). Nurturing Readership Skills in the Digital Age: Contributions of the Reading Tent Project in Njoro, Kenya. Journal of Information and Knowledge, 40(3), 211–226. https://doi.org/10.17821/srels/2003/v40i3/48951
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All the articles published in Journal of Information and Knowledge are held by the Publisher. Sarada Ranganathan Endowment for Library Science (SRELS), as a publisher requires its authors to transfer the copyright prior to publication. This will permit SRELS to reproduce, publish, distribute and archive the article in print and electronic form and also to defend against any improper use of the article.
Received 2014-05-19
Accepted 2014-05-19
Accepted 2014-05-19