Wednesday, August 03, 2011

High hopes for low decile schools

Next week high school students will return to their old primary and intermediate schools to dispel some of the myths around what to expect when making the jump to secondary school.

The Duffy Books in Homes School Leader assemblies allow schools to invite two senior high school students to speak about what to expect at high school, what they hope to achieve afterwards and how a love of books and reading can make all the difference to children’s futures.

Duffy Books in Homes regularly sends well-known role models to visit its 541 schools but having speakers closer to their own age helps to show children that the next step in their education doesn’t have to be a daunting one.

Many of these senior students are past pupils of the schools they visit.  Some still have brothers and sisters still at their old school and they also enjoy the chance to reconnect with their old teachers.

Each Duffy school is given four books and two certificates to present to the School Leaders after their assembly.  This year’s School Leaders will be able to choose from Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Potiki by Patricia Grace, Sons for the Return Home by Albert Wendt, and One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

Duffy Books in Homes General Manager, Linda Vagana, is a strong believer in the initiative, “High school students are as much role models and leaders to our Duffy kids as New Zealand sports stars and personalities.  It’s a great opportunity for our kids to hear and share the aspirations of young people and leaders of their own community,” she said.

Since the official launch in 1995 with 80 schools, 16,000 students and 14 sponsors, the Duffy Books in Homes programme has grown to encompass 541 schools, around 100,000 students and more than 200 sponsors in 2011.  More than seven million books have been distributed to children in low-decile schools since its inception and the programme now distributes more than 600,000 books annually.

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