The role of rural school libraries on childrens exposure to literacy in the Namibian context

Authors

  • Simon Lumbu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32642/ncpdje.vi.1293

Abstract

The link between libraries and reading development has been found to be a determining factor in literacy development by scholars the world over. Based on the findings of a study on the constraints encountered by teachers in teaching English as a Second Language (ESL) in rural combined schools in the Oshana region, this paper analyses the role of school libraries in rural schools in Namibia. The study made use of the qualitative approach to investigate some of the causes of ineffective teaching and learning in rural schools. Each year, the Directorate of National Examinations and Assessments (DNEA) reveals poor academic performance in the National Senior Secondary Certificate examinations, particularly in the English subject. This study found that poor learner reading skills coupled with learners’ limited access to reading materials constrained the teaching of ESL. Although there were libraries at each school that participated in the study, physical set-up of the libraries often did not qualify them to be libraries in a prototypical definition of a library. It is introspection worthy to examine the role of these rural school libraries on children’s exposure to literacy in an environment of limited reading materials.

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Published

2018-02-22

How to Cite

Lumbu, S. (2018). The role of rural school libraries on childrens exposure to literacy in the Namibian context. The Namibia CPD Journal for Educators, 94–101. https://doi.org/10.32642/ncpdje.vi.1293