Buggy Buddy books in action
One week ago today, we held a target literacy conference in East Lothian. Literacy is a key focus for the authority and this conference was the starting point for building a coherent strategy to ensure all our children are literate. One of the key outcomes of our Service Improvement Plan is - ‘All children will be literate by the end of Primary 6, unless they have identified specific learning difficulties or severe and complex needs’. This is quite a target, but I believe it is also a target our children are entitled to. We have a good basis to achieve this in East Lothian, we already have children who start school reading and our levels of literacy are very good - but there are still some who struggle. We need to make sure all who can achieve functional literacy … do.
The purpose of the conference was to invite representatives from many sectors and areas of the community including schools, parents, support services, adult literacy, police, employers and to consider what literacy means to each of us. Having a shared understanding of what it is to be literate from 0-adulthood is key to understanding our roles in developing literacy. Another key objective of the day was to look at our services and to build a greater understanding of our roles, looking to see where we can work more strategically and perhaps more effectively to ensure literacy for all happens.
The morning started with an inspirational talk from Mathew Fitt celebrating the Scots language. He focused on the increase in confidence shown, particularly in boys, when they were able to work and speak in the language from home and not the ‘English’ normally expected in schools. His talk resonated with my own childhood where Scots was felt to be slang and was definitely discouraged to such an extent that it is quite alien to me now. Matthew’s books and translations in Scots can be found at itchy-coo publications and are well worth a look.
The rest of the morning consisted of two workshops. The first involved discussion about ‘What is a literate child’ from 0 to adulthood. Groups worked to consider what literacy looks like at different stages of life - 0-2, 3-5, 6-8 ……. 25+. What evidence is there and how do we know. This was really interesting, the perspectives of different sectors brought a real richness to the discussion.
The second workshop concentrated on auditing what we currently do to support literacy and how we can move forward and improve. This brought to the fore the wide range of services and supports in place but also encouraged us to think creatively and to look for opportunities to develop further strategies - to ‘think out the box’.
The draft statements and initial findings from the day are published below. Thoughts and comments are welcome. Now the real work begins! This feedback and all the information gathered will be key in informing the emerging East Lothian literacy strategy. The key will be continuing to develop this strategy with the very good links developed with support from this conference.
East Lothian Target Literacy Conference - Workshop 1 notes
East Lothian Target Literacy Conference - Workshop 2 notes