Monday, June 29, 2015

A Book in Every Home, and Then Some


When we imagine people without books, we think of villagers in places like Afghanistan. But many families in the United States have no children’s books at home. In some of the poorest areas of the country, it’s hard to find books for sale. A study (pdf) of low-income neighborhoods in Philadelphia, for example, found a ratio of one book for sale for every 300 children. Tens of millions of poor Americans can’t afford to buy books at all.
Tapping a vast potential market of young readers too poor to buy books.
At Fixes, we like to highlight creative ways that markets can be harnessed to extend access to vital services likeelectricitycredit, or water. Today, I’m focusing on a nonprofit organization called First Book, which is spearheading a new market mechanism that is delivering millions of new, high quality books to low-income children through thousands of nonprofit organizations and Title Ischools.

The First Book Marketplace is trying to do for publishing what micro-finance did for banking: crack open a vast potential market that is underserved at significant social cost. The organization’s goal is to democratize book access, but along the way, it may end up reinvigorating the book business.
Some 42 percent of American children — more than 31 million — grow up in families that lack the income to cover basic needs like rent, child care, food and transportation. “These are families that are not buying books at retail,” notes Kyle Zimmer, the co-founder of First Book. “Not only are we losing 42 percent of kids whose families can’t afford books; the industry isn’t reaching 42 percent of its potential market. The system isn’t serving them.”
In bookstores, most hardcover children’s books sell for $15 to $20, with paperbacks typically running from $5 to $10. Although lower cost titles are available, the pricing of books — especially the most popular and attractive children’s books, as well as baby board books — puts regular book buying out of reach for low-income families.
This situation might be acceptable if books were luxuries, like silk scarves. But educators contend that access to books should be seen as a necessity, alongside access to food, shelter and health care. Indeed, numerous studies have shown that making books more accessible to children — through libraries, reading programs and home libraries — can produce marked improvements in their reading behavior. A meta-analysis published last August found that access to books plays a “causal role” in children’s motivation to read.
It’s often assumed that families without books lack interest in reading. But that is not necessarily the case. “When poor people, even those at low literacy levels, have a little extra money, they will buy inexpensive books,” explains Susan B. Neuman, a professor at the University of Michigan, who specializes in early literacy development and co-authored the study in Philadelphia. “But some families have so little disposable income, they can’t afford any books.” This is bad news for their kids. Around the world, one thing that has been shown to be a consistently powerful predictor of academic achievement is a home library. [1]
Children at Children’s Zone Promise Academy in Harlem reading one of their new books from a First Book distribution. First BookChildren at Children’s Zone Promise Academy in Harlem reading one of their new books from a First Book distribution. 
What makes the problem even worse is that 80 percent of pre-school and after school programs serving low-income children do not have any children’s books, either, largely because they lack the money to buy them. “A poor child goes from a home without books to a pre-school situation without books,” says Neuman. “That creates serious problems for literacy later on.”
There are many factors that influence children’s reading and no one is claiming that books alone will solve the problem. However, some noted educators, such as Stephen Krashen, professor emeritus at the University of Southern California, have argued that “simply providing access is the first and most important step in encouraging literacy development.”
Libraries can make a huge difference — but inequalities persist there too. A study of book access in Los Angeles, co-authored by Krashen, found that school classrooms in Beverly Hills offered children eight times as many books as classrooms in Watts and Compton. Their school libraries also carried about three times as many titles and their public libraries carried roughly twice as many. Moreover, libraries in poor communities are open fewer hours.
First Book was founded by Kyle Zimmer and two colleagues. Zimmer had previously worked as a lawyer and community organizer. She got an intimate view of poverty while working as a volunteer tutor for poor children in Washington, D.C. Zimmer became close with some families and visited their homes — where she discovered an absence of children’s books. “I think it’s a surprise to almost anybody of modest means that there are families and children in this country without books,” she said.
She saw that children’s eyes lit up when they were given a book of their own, particularly a new book with an attractive cover. Kids would say, “Can I really take this home?” Some would add: “This is my first book.” They would go home and do their best to read it — and then they would come back and ask for another one.
First Book established volunteer chapters in hundreds of communities across the country. The organization would purchase books and donate them to groups helping low-income kids to read — everything from schools to reading groups in church basements, from Head Start programs to public shelters. “There is an army of volunteers and professionals out there who are working their hearts out in the least romanticized environments — in destitute communities, in high crime areas. We’re sending them no supplies at all — and we’re surprised when they fail,” says Zimmer.
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Read previous contributions to this series.
In 1999, the organization piloted the first national book bank in the United States, an online system to distribute bulk book donations from publishers to thousands of reading programs. To date, First Book has distributed close to 85 million books.
In recent years, however, the limitations of the book bank have become apparent. Publishers, facing tough times, have trimmed costs and cut print runs, which means less excess inventory for donation. At the same time, recessionary pressures mean less money for schools and nonprofits from foundations and governments. But the children still need books. “We would put up 400,000 books for distribution on the book bank and 36 hours later they’d be gone and we’d be turning thousands of organizations away,” Zimmer explained.
In 2008, First Book launched its marketplace with the goal of making books systematically available at deeply reduced prices — typically 50 to 90 percent off — to any organization that was certified tax-exempt and serving children in need. First Book offered publishers an intriguing deal. Even though the profit margins would be much smaller than normal, because the organization could aggregate sales across its network, it could make bulk purchases and remove the publishers’ biggest risk: returns. All sales would be final. First Book promised to be hyper-vigilant that books sold through its marketplace would not bleed into normal retail channels.
It took a while for the idea to catch on. “A few publishers were tiptoeing when we started,” explained Zimmer. “But now they’re pretty jazzed, because we pay on time and they haven’t seen any wobble in their retail market that has to do with us.”
Most books on the marketplace sell for under $4 with the average paperback going for $2. All shipping costs are included in the prices. Currently, there are close to 2,000 titles. “Where the Wild Things Are” (retail $8.95) sells for $2.79. “Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Sleeping Dog” (retail $5.50) sells for $1.85. “To Kill a Mockingbird” (retail $7.99) goes for $3.50. First Book’s chief financial officer, Jane Robinson, recalled: “People came to us and said, ‘The children are all talking about “The Diary of a Wimpy Kid” and we don’t want our kids to be left out — but we can’t afford it.” Now it’s available for $3. A special bilingual edition of “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” sells for $3.25.
For publishers, the timing is fortuitous. Long term sales projections have been flat. This year, First Book expects to sell 3.5 million titles — close to 1 percent of unit sales in the U.S. children’s book market. At present, the marketplace is still relatively unknown — only 27,000 out of an estimated 1.2 million eligible programs have signed up. First Book’s goal is to be working with 250,000 programs in three years.
Publishers have historically had difficulty serving low-income buyers. “This market is incredibly fragmented,” explains Lisa Holton, who ran Scholastic Trade and Book Fairs and Disney Global Children’s Books. “Because First Book has been completely focused on this area for so long, they really know the customers.”
Publishers are also excited by the content possibilities. Many people go into publishing because they believe in the transformative power of books. Sometimes editors want to publish books that meet real needs, but if the market is risky it’s hard to go forward. First Book is in a position to survey thousands of organizations and ask what they want to teach. If enough groups request, say, Native American stories or Mandarin-English dictionaries or Spanish translations of midlist books, First Book can present publishers with a safer market.
Chandler Arnold, the executive director of the First Book Marketplace, explains: “Publishers have historically had to fight hard for their slice of the market segment. Here we’re making the entire market bigger. What we want to do is unabashedly change the way our country educates our hardest to reach children — and do it in a way that generates revenues for the publishing industry so that they take it up.”
I asked Zimmer if she was worried that publishers would eventually start competing with First Book rather than partnering with the organization. “The goal for us is fixing the access problem not commandeering every sale,” she said. “If we can play a role in waking the industry up to the viability of this market, then we’ll call it a win. We will be toasting each other with mint juleps on a cause well done. And I’ll go out and get a real job.”
On Friday, I’ll respond to comments and highlight two organizations that bring books to children in need.
FOOTNOTE:
[1] A study of close to 3,000 children in Germany found that the number of books in the home strongly predicted reading achievement — even after controlling for the parents’ education levels and income. And a massive, longitudinal study examining the educational attainment of 70,000 students from 27 countries found, surprisingly, that having lots of books in the home was as good a predictor of children’s educational attainment as parents’ education levels. In fact, access to books was more predictive than the father’s occupation or the family’s standard of living. The greatest impact of book access was seen among the least educated and poorest families.
Update: 
On the Fixes Facebook page, readers are discussing their favorite books. Join the conversation »
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David Bornstein

David Bornstein is the author of “How to Change the World,” which has been published in 20 languages, and “The Price of a Dream: The Story of the Grameen Bank,” and is co-author of “Social Entrepreneurship: What Everyone Needs to Know.” He is the founder of dowser.org, a media site that reports on social innovation.
sumber: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/16/a-book-in-every-home-and-then-some/?_r=0

INCLUSIVE LITERACY PENNY LACEY

INCLUSIVE LITERACY
PENNY LACEY

AIM
To enable participants to reflect on aspects of teaching and learning in relation to pupils with profound (and multiple) learning disabilities.

INTENDED OUTCOMES
By the end of the session, you should be able to:

  1. reflect on your literacy sessions and decide how they might be developed even more
  2. be an even better story teller for pupils with PMLD
  3. enable pupils with PMLD to participate even more in your lessons

CONTENT
  • Reminder of difficulties in learning faced by those with profound learning disabilities
  • University of Birmingham Inclusive Literacy Research
  • Story telling ideas
  • Evaluation of the participation of pupils with PMLD in a Maths lesson


***************

Researchers from the Universities of Birmingham, Manchester Metropolitan and Plymouth studied the way schools approach teaching literacy to children with severe learning difficulties.  Although not the main focus of the study, pupils with profound learning disabilities featured in the information we collected.  This article is an attempt to share some of what we found.

The study took about 18 months to complete and during that time, we carried out five different activities:
  1. desk-based research using books, journals, magazines and web-sites
  2. observations in classrooms, in both literacy lessons and others lessons where literacy skills might be being used
  3. interviews of the teachers who taught those lessons
  4. focus groups of teachers to discuss our results
  5. interviews of ‘expert witnesses’ (people who are well-known for developing aspects of literacy with children with SLD/PMLD).

Conventional Literacy
Most definitions of the word ‘literacy’ contain reference to reading and writing text and the reality in schools (special or mainstream) is that Literacy on the timetable is about learning to read and write or to engage in activities that are eventually meant to lead to reading printed or written text as well as generating written text and writing.  The original National Literacy Strategy material (DfEE, 1998) answers its own question of ‘what is literacy?’ : with ‘Literacy unites the important skills of reading and writing’.  It does go on to include speaking and listing as important, but the rest of the materials are about reading and writing: speaking and listening are hardly mentioned again.

This position has changed with the new Primary National Strategy (DfES, 2006), where speaking and listening are much more prominent under the literacy heading, with 4 of the 12 strands relating to 1. speaking, 2. listening and responding, 3. group discussion and interaction and 4. drama.  The other 8 all relate specifically to reading and writing, with the emphasis at an early stage on learning through ‘synthetic phonics’, where children need sophisticated knowledge about the segmental nature of spoken language and to be able to match speech-sounds and letters.

I have dwelt on conventional views of literacy because when we went to schools for pupils with SLD/ PMLD, we found that most of them were taking a conventional approach to teaching literacy,  at least to pupils with SLD.  Children were being taught words and phonics, how to get information from books and other kinds of text, and lessons we observed looked very similar to those that can be seen in mainstream classrooms all round the country.  There was a greater variation for pupils with profound learning disabilities, but even so, many lessons looked, in essence similar to the prescription for the Literacy Hour. 

Observations
Typically, a class of children with severe and profound learning disabilities were seen sitting in a semi-circle around a teacher holding a big book.  The book was read or a story told using the pictures and staff engaged the pupils in the story through pictures and objects.  Following the story, again typically, the class divided into smaller groups for work related in some way to the book but pitched at a level that was right for the individuals in that group.  Usually, the whole class met again for a plenary session at the close of the lesson where pupils’ work was recalled and celebrated.

The work we observed that was specifically designed for pupils with profound learning disabilities was often sensory in nature.  It was usually centred around a story or a book, but access to the activity was often through objects to touch and activate or odours to smell, things to look at and listen to or even food to taste.  We saw stories being told through a range of sensory experiences, such as the Bag book ‘Gran’s Visit’.

There were also examples of what might be called ‘pure communication’, rather than anything specifically related to conventional literacy or pre-literacy skills.  These were variations on Intensive Interaction (Nind and Hewett, 2000) and usually began from the child him or herself, rather than from a book or a story.  The intention appeared to be to engage the child and achieve even minimal social interaction using little games associated with typically developing infants and caregivers.  One game observed involved the adult having a conversation of ‘ahs’, following the lead of the child’s vocalisations.  It is not known whether the adult thought that what was happening was part of literacy but it was happening in a Literacy lesson.

Inclusive Literacy
One of the central concepts that developed through the study was the idea of ‘inclusive literacy’.  Conventional literacy is clearly not open to children (or adults) with profound learning disabilities as they are not going to learn to read and write.  However, if we conceive of literacy as ‘inclusive’, there may be ways in which even the most profoundly disabled can take part.  So what did we mean by ‘inclusive literacy’?  We identified a range of activities for learners with SLD that we want to argue could legitimately be identified as ‘inclusive literacy’ even if there was no use of text at all, and many of these can include those with profound learning disabilities.  We identified:

       Objects of reference
       Life quilts and life history boxes
       Personal storytelling
       Sensory stories & multimedia stories
       Cause and effect software
       Photo albums and scrap books
       Picture books & stories
       Graphic facilitation
       Reading icons and symbols
       Talking books
       Early conventional reading skills
       Simple conventional books
       Drama and role play
       Simple software for computer
       Television and films
       Navigating websites (eg: Eastenders)
       Creating websites
       Still photography to create books
       Film-making

The list includes some activities that definitely do not fit into conventional literacy relating to letters, words and text.  Some can be seen as ‘new literacies’ belonging to the media age of television, ipods and computers (Lankshear and Knobel, 2003) and others are seen as, perhaps simplifications of, or substitutions for, the whole business of traditional text-based literacy, such as objects of reference, life quilts and sensory stories.

Objects of Reference
The first few in the list seem to have the greatest potential for learners with profound learning disabilities.  Objects of reference (Ockelford, 2002), for example could be seen as the first real step into learning about symbols, which in conventional literacy might lead to more and more abstract symbols and eventually into letters, words and text.  In the absence of this kind of progression, learning to use objects of reference can be seen as an early and important form of literacy in its own right for those learners who are unable to progress further down the conventional literacy or even the new literacies route.

Life Quilts and Life Boxes
Life quilts (Grove, 1996) or life history boxes can be seen as akin to books about a person.  A life quilt is literally a quilt made from sewing together pieces of material from the clothes, curtains, cushions, duvet covers that have meaning for that person from early childhood through to adulthood.  There can also be objects sewn into the quilt: anything that might spark familiarity.  If this started at an early age and continually added to and enjoyed, it can become an important ‘book’.  Alternatively or in addition, a box can be used to collect important objects such as slippers, a personal cup, a toy or birthday candles.  These can be used regularly to ‘tell the story’ of the person’s life.

Sensory Stories and Multimedia Activities
There are many examples of sensory stories in schools and colleges: published and home-made, although perhaps fewer multimedia stories.  If you haven’t already found Pete Well’s disgusting stories, you might try them especially with teenagers or young adults.  Go to http://www.portland-school.co.uk/Petes-stuff/PetesStuff.htm.  Two other special school websites that offers interesting activities for learners with profound learning disabilities are Priory Woods School  www.priorywoods.middlesbrough.sch.uk/ and Meldreth Manor School http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/meldreth/textandinfo/Powerp/Media2.html.

Pictures and Moving Pictures
The activities on our list that are related to pictures (still or moving) may or may not be meaningful to an individual with profound learning disabilities.  Learning to understand and ‘read’ pictures is an important skills for learners with SLD and the first rungs of that ladder may be relevant to someone with profound disabilities, especially recognising themselves, their family and friends on video.  For some people, attaching the camera to the television and watching themselves in real time can be motivating and interesting.

Film-making and Drama
There are some other activities on our list above within which learners with profound disabilities could be included, for example film making or drama.  Nicola Grove and Keith Park have many suggestions for how this can be achieved and if you haven’t come across their work, you might start with their book ‘Odyssey Now’ (Grove and Park, 1996) or ‘Macbeth in Mind’ (Grove and Park, 2001) or find Keith’s many articles published in SLD Experience.  Keith’s work can also be seen on Teacher’s TV online in a programme called ‘Special Schools: Access the Curriculum http://www.teachers.tv/video/1403

Conclusions
From our research we were able to see examples of activities that we called ‘inclusive literacy’.  We recognise, as did the teachers in the study, that literacy for learners who don’t learn to read and write is not conventional.  It includes a wider view of communication than might typically be seen as literacy, as well as some of the new literacies that are more often associated with creative, performance or media studies or information and communications technology.  For the most profoundly disabled learners, to be inclusive, literacy must also embrace the use of objects as a kind of text and perhaps even see someone learning to anticipate a favourite activity as learning to ‘read’ what is happening.  I don’t want to stretch literacy to a ridiculous degree but there is definitely more to it than the conventional reading and writing of text.

Hopefully, the inclusive literacy activities that have been briefly discussed in this article will inspire you to be as creative as you can in providing experiences for learners with profound learning disabilities.  Although joining in a conventional literacy hour with more able peers is one activity, there are lots more that appear to us as legitimate responses to teaching literacy to learners who are not going to learn to read and write.  Have fun in Literacy!

The research was carried out by Lyn Layton, Penny Lacey, Carol Miller, Juliet Goldbart and Hazel Lawson.  The article was written by Penny Lacey, Senior Lecturer in Education, The University of Birmingham, School of Education, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT.



REFERENCES


Caldwell, P. (2007) From Isolation to Intimacy: Making Friends Without Words London: Jessica Kingsley

Corke, M. (2002) Approaches to Communication Through Music London; David Fulton

Coupe O’Kane, J. and Goldbart, J. (1998) Communication Before Speech London; David Fulton

DfES (1998) The National Literacy Strategy London: DfES

DfES (2006) The Primary National Strategy http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/primaryframeworks/ (accessed 25.10.06)

Fyfe, C. (2001) Gulliver’s Travels: A Multisensory Approach London: Bag Books

Grove, N. (1996) Life quilts, Talking Sense 42, 2 (http://www.sense.org.uk/publications/allpubs/magazine/tsarticles/1996/lifequilts.htm) (accessed 26.10.06)

Grove, N. and Park, K. (1996) Odyssey Now London: Jessica Kingsley

Grove, N. etc (2000) See What I Mean?  Guidelines to Aid Understanding of Communication by People with Severe and Profound Learning Disabilities Kidderminster: BILD

Grove, N. and Park, K. (2001) Social Cognition through Drama and Literature for People with Learning Disabilities: Macbeth in Mind London: Jessica Kingsley

Grove, N. (2005) Ways into Literature London: David Fulton

Lacey, P. and Ouvry, C. (1998) People with Profound and Multiple Learning Disabilities London: David Fulton

Lacey, P. (2006) Inclusive Literacy PMLD-Link 18, 3, 11-13

Lankshear, C. and Knobel, M. (2003) New Literacies: Changing Knowledge and Classroom Learning Maidenhead: Open University Press

Nind, M. and Hewett, D. (2000) A Practical Guide to Intensive Interaction Kidderminster: BILD

Ockleford, A. (2002) Objects of Reference London: RNIB








Useful Websites

Bag Books

Call Centre story packs

Catalyst
(Flo Longhorn) (Information Exchange)

CBeebies (switch accessible)

Check the Map (list of fun sites)

Communication aids

Dave Hewett

Dub City Rockers (music games)

Hirstwood Training (multisensory)

Inclusive Technology (hardware & software)

Intensive Interaction

Knee Bouncers (fun games)

Mencap PMLD section

Moorcroft School sensory stories
MOVE
(movement)

Oily Cart
(theatre)

Pete Wells sensory stories

Poisson Rouge (cause and effect games)

PMLD Link (magazine)

PMLD Network (email forum)

Priory Woods School (cause and effect games)

Routes for Learning

Sherbourne Developmental Movement

SLD Forum (email forum)

Soundabout (music)

Sound Beam

Story Sacks

Tac Pac

Tactile books for visually impaired people

University of Birmingham (courses in SLD/ PMLD)
then click on Learning Difficulties and Disabilities



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