Parents in our Paraguay program value education, but it’s not always easy to connect their young children in rural communities with teachers so they can begin learning. So, when we introduce a literacy program in the country, the buzz is palpable.
This time, in eight months, 512 children developed literacy and social skills — such as vocabulary and basic words to express themselves — with the help of 15 teachers.
The project built excitement among families. “I learned about the importance of playing with our children,” shares Shirley, mother to four-year-old Abigail. “We don’t need expensive books or expensive toys, because we have materials to make them at home. We can even tell stories to our children using our imagination.”
Families like Shirley’s were part of what we call “emergent literacy.” This process involves several strategies — such as storytelling, singing with hand and finger puppets as well as setting specific reading times — to spark positive learning habits by the time kids are old enough to go to school.
Parents introduced new words to their kids through stories and riddles; they discovered how reading at home improves language development, comprehension and speech awareness. At the same time, their skills improved as they monitored their child’s growth.
Deisy, mom to Yerutí, 4, sees a difference in her family since the project ended. “We’ve learned to negotiate and find ways for our children to understand ideas without imposing things, like the old way,” she says, alluding to a common practice of ordering children to complete a task.
This is a key learning in a culture where corporal punishment is often considered the best way to teach children.
Beyond training, families received education kits with sensory books, books by national authors, puppets and more.
The kits have been popular in Shirley’s house where her husband is getting involved in raising their daughter. “I tell him all I learn so he can sit down with [our daughter] and tell stories; he even went to some of the workshops to learn how we can help,” she says.