Transcript Slide 1

Making Connections:
Better Beginnings, Partnerships
and Collaborations
Growing up with Better Beginnings
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Supporting and
involving parents in
their children’s early
literacy learning
Introducing children
to developmentally
appropriate books
and literacy activities
Raising awareness of
the value of reading
to children
Linking families to
library resources and
services that provide
positive early literacy
experiences for their
children
140 Local governments
232 Libraries
310 Community health centres
420 Schools
4 Education sector
5 Government sector
8 Non-Government
sector
110 Remote Aboriginal communities
60,000
families involved annually
Rio Tinto
WA Local Governments
Dept of Regional Development
and Lands
State Government of WA
200,000
families reached to date
from little things….
How the program works
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Free reading packs for every child at
birth and starting school
Literacy resources including Discovery
Backpacks, Storytime Boxes, Read
Aloud Book Sets, online literacy
databases
Family rhyme and story sessions
Training and support resources for
practitioners
Library outreach to new parent
groups, schools, child-care centres
Family literacy collections and parent
information sessions in libraries
Children up to the age of five who have had limited
exposure to printed language and who have not been
read to...have increased risk for reading failure and
general poor school performance.
Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth, report 2008
Working collaboratively
Libraries, community health
centres, schools working
together to reinforce key
messages
MOU between State Library
of WA and Dept of Health
It’s wonderful to have support
across the community emphasising
the importance of reading and
language development. It’s not
just a health issue, it’s a community
issue.
Community Health Nurse, Evaluation of The
Better Beginnings Family Literacy Program, 2007
I love the program and feel it fills a gap between the home and school in regard to
literacy that has not been targeted at kindergarten/pre-primary level before.
It’s going to benefit both the child and the parents and develop those links with the
town library that people will just value what libraries have to offer…wherever they
are in the State, they’re going to be able to go and reap the rewards.
Teacher, Growing Better Beginnings, Evaluation of The Better Beginnings Family Literacy Program, 2010
Working collaboratively
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Linking with organisations
providing targeted services for
socially disadvantaged and
isolated families
Trialing resources in adult
education programs
Read to me, I love it!
Connecting with families in remote Aboriginal communities
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Work with Community Councils, Aboriginal health services,
independent community schools
Two year commitment with regular communications and
quarterly delivery of reading packs for families in over 100
remote Aboriginal communities
Training for library staff on cultural awareness and providing
library services to Aboriginal people
The kids love it when we get [the packs]... they cheer and cheer. One mother
reads with her 4 year old every afternoon after school now … She said without
these books, they would not have any to read. I didn't realise the program was
having this kind of an impact on families. Teacher, Tjuntjuntjara Remote Community School, 2009
Making a difference
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99% of mothers and 72% of
fathers reported reading regularly
with their child (only 14% reported
reading before the program)
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88% of parents report that their
confidence in sharing books with
their child had increased after
being involved in Better
Beginnings.
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81% of mothers joined the library
saying that the program had
influenced this decision.
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Average number of books in the
home suitable for reading to the
child increased from 20 to 125.
Visit us at www.better-beginnings.com.au
We have to do everything we can to give all our children opportunities to get off to a
strong start, and community institutions play a critical role. For parents and families,
libraries and museums are a go-to resource that supports them as their child's first
teacher.
Growing Young Minds:How Museums and LibrariesCreate Lifelong Learners, IMLS, Washington DC, June 2013
Questions?
You need to learn to read. It helps you with every other subject
and if you don’t read, you struggle with everything else in life.
Parent, Making a Difference: Evaluation of The Better Beginnings Family Literacy Program, 2007