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Global Grant Option for Rotary Clubs

A Global Grant to help 12000 children read in South Africa!

The past and the present! Global Grant #25244 has been extraordinarily successful in building fundamental literacy skills for almost 8000 children of Mamelodi in Gauteng Province, South Africa. Such success has led to a new Global Grant proposal to provide Souns literacy materials to 250 classrooms in Gauteng and surrounding Provinces via the University of Pretoria, University of Venda, and the Peace Corps. This new grant will provide materials initially impacting almost 12,000 children through primary schools and creches, as well as equipping Peace Corps volunteers with Souns materials to better serve them as a resource for their communities.

Since Souns materials are not expendable, the overall impact as the years go by will be exponential. The grant provides funds for classroom materials only and is matched almost dollar-for-dollar by experienced Rotarian volunteers training local teachers to implement the program. Teaching teachers ensures long term sustainability.

The almost completed Global Grant 25244 ($34,200) was initiated by D9400, Host Club Pretoria East, and D6900, International Partner Club Peachtree City, along with Rotary Clubs Carrollton Dawnbreakers, East Cobb, and North Fulton. This international literacy project is changing lives for children. Clearly, this is a demonstration of the power of Rotary.

The new, proposed Global Grant ($50,000) is being initiated, once again, by the Rotary Club of Pretoria East. This project builds on the collaboration between D6900 (International Partner) and D9400 (Host) and promises an even larger impact by Rotary on the fundamental literacy skills for young children in South Africa.

If you are in District 6900(USA) or District 9400(ZA) and are interested in your club participating in this international literacy Global Grant, please email everychildwillread@gmail.com. If you are in another Rotary District and want to get involved in this effort, contact me and we will find a way to make that happen. The world is filled with children who want to read, and we need as many hands joined as possible. The ability to read and write is the peacemaker, and we must ensure that every child – YES, EVERY – child will read!

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Mothers – Teachers Of The World

From conception there is a conversation between mother and child. Sounds filter into the cradled world of the little being inside the womb. Words are heard and voices are categorized. The child’s brain is developing and recording. The mother is the first and most important teacher for a child whether the child is within the womb or without. She holds, nurtures, and guides, helping the child acclimate to the world. Learning how to dress, learning how to eat, learning the home language – all require the attention, patience, and help of the mother. Every detail is absorbed with the voracious appetite of a young growing brain. Understanding the rapid growth of the brain at this stage is of great importance, as the cells that are not used are “pruned.” Therefore, a sensorially stimulating, language rich, experiential environment is the best environment for this new little being.

As the teacher of the child, mothers are the power that can change the world. Imagine children going to school already able to read and write. School is for learning, but it is not necessary to be in school to learn the fundamentals of reading and writing. In fact, the child is with the mother during the most ideal time to teach those skills, and it requires no special training, just a miniscule paradigm shift. From one to three years of age is the optimal time to learn the tools of print. No pressure, so simple and natural. Mothers are the logical teachers of the child. How can we remove the stigma of school being the place to learn basic literacy skills? School is for learning about the world, building a body of information and understanding through reading. But reading and writing begin at home! Mothers, accept the power of one – each and every one of you can teach your child to read and write.

Building literacy tools is natural and fun! Here is one opportunity.

“Look at the great /o/ (ahh) you made. I can show you an /o/ in a book when you finish drawing.”

Just make sure you give the letter-sound association ONLY!  Short vowel sounds and hard consonant sounds until the child begins decoding. Letter-names come after the child begins sounding out words.

Visit www.souns.org to read more. Google and enjoy the work of Dr. Patricia Kuhl to be amazed at the unfolding of the young brain

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Every Child – YES EVERY – Child Will Read!

 

Such a great experience showing teachers how to implement Souns in the Head Start program in San Juan Municipality. The children of Puerto Rico will read. Beautiful people, eager children, the tremendous support of Rotary Districts 7000, 6990, and The Rotary Foundation are making this work happen. What magic. How critical a journey. Literacy is the key to peace in the world. A child who cannot read will be a victim for life. Children from economically challenged environments have the same inherent abilities as children from economically advantaged environments. We can make a difference for all children with Souns, leveling the playing field, and building a better world for all. We thank you, Rotary!

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SounsPuertoRico / Museo del Niño

Rotary District 7000 is engaging children in Head Start classrooms and at the Museo del Niño in activities that build literacy naturally. Letter-sound associations are so easy for a child to learn if the experience is fun and hands-on. In Head Start and at the Museo, Rotarians volunteer their time and talents, and provide the Souns materials to ensure the children of San Juan have fundamental skills in place when they are developmentally ready to write and read. Below is the beautiful environment at the Museo del Niño.

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SounsPuertoRico has begun!

San Juan Municipality Head Start centers are the recipients of a Rotary grant providing Souns materials to 127 classrooms. The training began Thursday, May 3, with training for 11 classrooms in two centers. We will train again in June and continue reaching the classrooms in August. What promising tomorrows for these children. The Souns training experience was as always with young children – smiling faces, little hands exploring symbols, enthusiasm that confirms a young child’s inimitable drive to learn. Give the tools of print  – letter-sound associations – to a child and he/she will build literacy – naturally! Within the hour these 5 year olds in the photo were writing with the symbols by listening (analyzing) the sounds they were saying. Pretty amazing program! Pretty fantastic kids! Futures in the making. Thank you Rotary Districts 7000, 6990, 6900, and The Rotary Foundation.

This grant addresses a plea from a child advocate in Puerto Rico to help 4000 disadvantaged children between 3 to 5 years of age build fundamental literacy skills in San Juan.

“Rescue our children! Our children are not learning to read and our system realistically is not poised to deliver change. We must take a stand and develop a nation of emergent readers before they enter the established education system. Science and evidence tell us that we can do this naturally if we provide young children with literacy tools as their brains are developing years 0-3. Souns is an evidence based program which does just that. It is a simple program that delivers children who are ready to read, if not reading, by the time they enter kindergarten. It is inexpensive, easily implemented, community oriented, and sustainable.”

Head Start is a preschool program for children from economically challenged families. The majority of the children enter Head Start with less developed literacy skills than those of most children the same age. The toll is high. According to a May 2011 issue of Caribbean Business, among the island’s population living under the poverty level, 62% did not complete high school. History confirms high school graduation and literacy skills go hand in hand.


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SounsAfrica – Go Rotary Club of Knysna!


Just back from Rotary District 9350 Conference.  Our SOUNS presentation went well, with Rotarian Annette Nelson (RC Knysna) and Rotarian Gavin Schachat (RC Sea Point).  The audience gave Annette a special applause when she was announced as the Western Cape Province winner in her category of the National Teacher of the Year, specifically for her work championing SOUNS.

Then, the next piece of good luck is that Rotary Club of Knysna won the Len Breen Trophy for the best community project in the District, also SOUNS!  So that is a feather in our caps!

Two separate recognitions from two different sources, and all because it is a method that works! And an organization that is serious about education, and literacy – Rotary!

Thank you to Rotarian Lesley Satchel, RC Knysna, Distict 9350, Knysna, South Africa


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Meet @tommmeeee!

@tommmeeee is a tomato frog who tweets…an imaginary creature with a dream of teaching the children of the world to read. One small frog with one large imagination. Our blog SounsTalk is joining @tommmeeee in his effort to build global literacy. Souns is the way Tomee Frog teaches, so we are going to link with @tommmeeee to reach as many little people as possible to help them learn letter-sound associations, the most direct link to reading and writing.

Whatever their language, families, teachers, caregivers in the world who use the symbols of the Latin alphabet for reading and writing can learn from @tommeeee. SounsTalk is our blog to build literacy in a world plagued with children who cannot read. Please join us by following @tommmeeee on Twitter and advocating for early literacy naturally through the Souns program.

Reading leads to informed choices, informed choices lead to freedom, and feedom leads to peace. It is a journey of promise for the children of the world. Learning is fun, and learning to read should be no exception. Thank you @tommmeeee for all we can do together…Ready, set, go!

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“Souns encompasses how kids naturally learn.”

“Well, after the training I was so impressed that my twins could identify the sounds,  I immediately started working with my five year old. She and I have been working on learning to read on and off for a few months but she is easily frustrated and when writing always wants my help to spell the word correctly. Well, she just happened to have homework last week where she needed to write a sentence in a book her class was making. After practicing using sounds (we made “real” words and nonsense words), she sat down to complete her homework and wrote the sentence completely on her own. She was so empowered and proud that she must have read the sentence 50 times to me. The sentence was about her and her brother playing so when he work up from his nap, she must have read the sentence to him 10 times. It was amazingly wonderful to see her so happy and proud of her work.”

“I love Souns because it is a hands-on approach to learning and it makes sense to learn the sounds before you actually learn the letters.  This program reaches kids at their developmental level because kids learn through play and through hands on experiences which makes this so much fun for the children.”

Parents from a preschool cooperative
Apopka, FLA