Rotary gifts dictionaries to SC students
Rotary to gift dictionaries to hundreds of SC students
Rotary is spreading the word.
Hundreds of South Canterbury Year Four pupils in primary schools across the district are about to receive a major – and free – boost to their educational and personal development with the gift of a personalised illustrated dictionary, courtesy of Rotary and the Community Trust of Mid and South Canterbury.
The five Rotary clubs in Area 1 and 2 of Rotary District 9980, the South Canterbury region, have collaborated for the first time in a project that Rotary District Governor Lionel Wilson of Timaru describes as a delightful and tangible way of helping to fulfil the Rotary International goal of literacy development of young people.
Seven thousand of the beautifully illustrated dictionaries will be distributed to South Canterbury schoolchildren over the next five years at a cost to the Community Trust of Mid and South Canterbury of $30,000.
The initial distribution of 800 dictionaries will
be in the hands of Year Four students throughout South
Canterbury within three weeks after special Rotary
presentations at school assemblies. A new shipment would be
distributed each February for the next five years.
Mr
Wilson said the project came about after he saw the success
of a similar community effort by Rotary clubs in
Invercargill.
“I picked up the template and managed to convince the Community Trust of Mid and South Canterbury to underwrite the project for five years. We are so grateful to them for doing this.
“It’s taken three years for us to get this off the ground, but the arrival in Timaru this week of 1000 dictionaries has made all the effort worthwhile,” Mr Wilson said.
Sorting and personalising of the
dictionaries is presently under way by the five Rotary clubs
in South Canterbury, the Rotary Club of Timaru South, the
Rotary Club of Timaru, the Rotary Club of Timaru North, the
Rotary Club of Temuka - Geraldine, and the Rotary Club of
Waimate.
Mr Wilson said the scale of the
distribution undertaking meant that a collaboration of
Rotary clubs was necessary.
“However, Marg Cochrane
from the Rotary Club of Timaru, is the dictionary project
co-ordinator and she has done a wonderful job.”
Printed
by Harper Collins New Zealand, the Usborne Illustrated
Dictionary normally retails at $NZ29.95.
It will be a
personal gift to the students.
“The dictionary doesn’t belong to a school, it belongs to the student. However, a dictionary will also be provided to their teachers.
“It is pitched around eight-year-olds because at that age they are starting to develop, ask questions and develop their vocabulary and when you don’t have such a resource as this, then they don’t.
“Year Four is the launching pad, they can use it right through their schooling,” Mr Wilson said.
He said the Rotary initiative, which was
first checked back with teachers during exhaustive surveys
in June last year, was also about upskilling
families.
“There are kids who will already have
dictionaries at home, but there will be some families for
which this will be their only book.”
It was the first time all South Canterbury Rotary clubs had collaborated in one project, he said.
“I wanted something that all the clubs could all do together, but I was just the facilitator,” Mr Wilson said.
“You can always achieve more as a team. We need to be able to make a difference to people’s lives and as individual clubs we could not have undertaken this project.”
He paid tribute to Hilton Haulage who transported the dictionaries to Timaru free of charge.
Click to enlarge
Rotary is
spreading the word: The first shipment of illustrated
dictionaries has arrived in South Canterbury and checking
out the beautiful illustrations are the people who made it
happen. From left is Raewyn Francis, president of the Rotary
Club of Waimate; dictionary project co-ordinator Marg
Cochrane, of the Rotary Club of Timaru; assistant governor
of Rotary District 9980 Bruce Borrell; Russell Staite,
president of the Rotary Club of Timaru North; and John
Wilson chairman of the Community Trust of Mid and South
Canterbury, which funded the books, 1000 of which are on the
pallet behind.
Click to enlarge
ROTARY IS THE WORD2.JPG
Let the sorting begin: President of the Rotary Club of Temuka and Geraldine, Alistair Millar (left) assists Rotary Club of Timaru South president Ken Batchelor with dictionary distribution and personalisation tasks.
ENDS