Literacy
in a digital world at heart of International Literacy Day, 8 September 2017
2017
International Literacy Prizes
UNESCO:
8.30.2017
This
year’s UNESCO International Literacy Prizes will be awarded to laureates from
Canada, Colombia, Jordan, Pakistan and South Africa on the occasion of International
Literacy Day, celebrated on 8 September. This year’s Literacy Prizes and
celebration will focus on literacy in a digital world.
This
year’s event will bring together stakeholders and decision-makers from
different parts of the world to examine how digital technology can help close
the literacy gap and gain better understanding of the skills needed in today’s
societies. This is particularly important considering that 750 million
illiterate people around the world, 63% of whom are women, still lack basic
reading and writing skills. This population includes 102 million young people
(aged 15-24), of whom 57% are female, according to UNESCO Institute for Statistics.
“Digital
technologies permeate all spheres of our lives, fundamentally shaping how we
live, work, learn and socialize,” says UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova in
her message for the Day. She emphasizes the importance of rethinking and
improving skills required to take part in the digital world: “These new
technologies are opening vast new opportunities to improve our lives and
connect globally—but they can also marginalize those who lack the essential
skills, like literacy, needed to navigate them.”
The
two awards of the UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize dedicated to mother-tongue
literacy education and training, sponsored by the Republic of Korea, will be
given to:
@Concordia |
Centre
for the Study of Learning & Performance (CSLP) at Concordia University
(Canada), for the Using Educational Technology to Develop Essential Educational
Competencies in Sub-Saharan Africa project, which develops and distributes its
material internationally free of charge.
@welovereading |
We Love Reading
(Jordan), a programme with a virtual community that offers online read-aloud
trainings for parents, mobilizes volunteers to read aloud in community
spaces to children and provides age-appropriate material through a digital
library.
The
three awards of the UNESCO Confucius Prize for Literacy, supported by the Government
of the People’s Republic of China and rewarding work that benefits rural
populations and out-of-school youth, particularly girls and women, will be
given to:
AdulTICoProgram of the
Secretariat of Information and Communications Technologies of the city of
Armenia (Colombia), for teaching digital competencies to seniors.
The
Citizens
Foundation (Pakistan) for its Aagahi Literacy Programme for Women and
Out-of-School Girls, which conducts digital educational needs assessments and
provides teaching services to support the education of younger girls and older
women.
FunDza (South Africa) for its readers and
writers project to develop a culture of reading and writing for pleasure
through an online platform that provides reading courses and writing
competitions as well as connecting readers and writers. READ
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