All schools that register to participate in the The Great Book Swap Challenge and
send their fundraising donations by December 1 2011, go into the draw to win a visit
from our ambassador Andy Griffiths.
Not only does The Great Book Swap Challenge encourage reading but it raises funds
for kids in remote communities who don’t have access to books. Everyone wins.
Andy Griffiths - ILF Ambassador
You can read what some schools have said about
their past participation.
The Great Book Swap Challenge 2012
Join the fun and share your favourite book with the world. Why not get your class,
your whole school or staff bookclub involved? You can hold your Great Book Swap
Challenge on Indigenous Literacy Day or any day throughout the school year, during
Children’s Book Week or during National Literacy & Numeracy Week.
More details.
Classroom ideas for Indigenous Literacy Day
Here are some ideas to get you started.
- Hold a literary soirée on or leading up to Indigenous Literacy Day Wednesday 5 September
2012. Invite a local author or Indigenous person to speak about
the importance of literacy.
- Invite your entire school community (students, staff & parents) to be a part
of The Great Book Swap. We send you a ‘How to’ kit once
you register.
- Participate in Read 5, Give 5 - supported by the
Children's Book Council of Australia.
- Invite your class or school bookclub to read a title from our
Indigenous booklist
.
- Set the scene. Brainstorm and list all the activities in a 24-hour period which
involve reading. Make a 'graffiti wall' with the combined suggestions of
the whole school community and sponsor each activity with a gold coin donation.
- Focus the whole day on reading. Hold a Reading Olympics with events such as rug
reading (small groups being read to), a reader's cup between staff and students
or staff and parents, relay reading (reading around the group, passing baton/book
between competitors), reading for meaning - following written directions (on a treasure
hunt, to make a model, prepare a meal etc) performance reading (turning stories
into scripts), relay writing (start a story and pass it on) etc.
- Celebrate the joy of reading. Hold a class or school literary lunch with each group
providing food featured in story.
- Devote part of the day to a 'read in'. Gather the school together in one
place (all staff, students, interested parents) and for a designated period engage
in read aloud and silent reading. Gather sponsorships (per number of participants).
- Conduct a 'Favourite Book Fair' where children donate an old favourite to
be sold at the fair.
- Host a 'In What Book' trivia event (for children or parents).
- Contact your local newspaper and tell them about the events your school is undertaking
and see if they will write a story about it or send a photographer.
- Author events - Invite Indigenous authors to your school for book readings.
- Send
a notice home to parents about the importance of Indigenous Literacy Day and invite
them to get their workmates and businesses involved. Invite local businesses to
match money raised by schools.
Please let us know what you are planning to do to support this important initiative.
The Indigenous Literacy Foundation would like to help generate local support if we
can. You are welcome to use the online contact form
or send an email to ILF.