My 83 year old mother has just been filling in the form to get a bus pass. Of course they want a photo, which is fair enough, but why, oh why do they need to ask for her ethnicity?
No doubt someone, somewhere is being paid to collect the statistics and present pretty graphs to others, who are probably being overpaid for doing unnecessary jobs, so that they can prove that they have done their job and pick up their pay checks at the end of the month. Racism as a job creation scheme.
John Lane – Library Services Manager – PooleThe visit I made this week was part of the Read A Million Words in Poole campaign, which has been spearheaded by the pasionate Library Services Development Manager, John Lane.
Frustrated that the Summer Reading Challenge fades out at the start of the new school year, he wanted something more permanent and continuing and so has adapted the Read a Million Words idea, that started in the US and was then transferred to Bristol and Wales (where I was also involved).
Children are encouraged to read a million words, (that’s like the entire Harry Potter collection) and get prizes and encouragement along the way at significant marker points. Words can be read anywhere – in books on posters on the back of cereal packets – and can be added to with special offers like 500 words for bringing Dad to the Library. It builds a deeper and more long lasting relationship with the Library than a quick summer scheme.
RAMW has been used mostly in schools so far, so John is experimenting with its use in a Library situation. Children seemed very aware of the scheme and there are already quite a few millionaires. By the time they reach that status they are pretty much in the habit of reading, but the brilliant children’s team in Pool are working hard to find ways to go beyond the million words with millionaire’s clubs and events.
When you talk to John, you soon find out how passionate he is about the scheme and the need to keep children reading as well as watching TV and Playing computer games. Learning to read powers up the language part of the brain like nothing else and promoting a love of reading is key to a successful education.
Good luck to all working on RAMW in Poole and more power to your elbow. I hope that your hard work will be noticed by other Libraries who will build upon it and give children elsewhere the opportunity of becoming RAMW millionaires too.
Well it did become a bit of a blur with Sat Nav moment in between. Seven days of Library visits is really quite exhausting. It’s lucky I was staying with my parents-in-law, who gave me lots of care and food and cold beers in the evening.
It may have been a blur, but it was good fun and I met a lot of wonderful and dedicated people all week. I had great fun on Friday morning with St Joseph’s School. They had been writing fairy stories with a modern twist and several children read out their own stories. One lad was a star – I think he will have to be a politician when he grows up. All I had to do was draw some illustrations to go with their stories, so it was both easy on m at the end of the week and very enjoyable.
Rossmore is a wonderful new Library. You will see from the picture that someone has managed to decorate the post modern frontage with a basket ball! Leslie, Tricia and Leo at Canford CliffsI managed to get everywhere just fine, using my Sat Nav. It seems to have stopped working with postcodes though. I had a bit of a business getting To Canford Cliffs Library. It is on Western Road, which splits in about five different directions. Helpful passers by kept sending me off in the wrong direction. I was in such a panic, I forgot to revert to Google maps on my iPhone, which has saved me a few times before. If I had trusted my instincts, I’d have got there very easily, but it is so easy to think that the Sat Nav knows best.
Many thanks to Laura, Tricia and Julie for looking after me all week. Hope to see you all again in the Orange Box in March for the opening of the fabulous new Hamworthy Library.