Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Read On Nottingham 9 November 2018 T:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Read On Nottingham 9 November 2018 T:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Read On Nottingham 9 November 2018 T: 020 7587 1842
W: literacytrust.org.uk Facebook: nationalliteracytrust

2 National Literacy Trust
Over 20 years of improving literacy levels in schools and communities

3 How we work We support over 6,500 schools and early years settings to deliver outstanding literacy provision. Last year we directly supported the literacy of 103,465 children through our programmes. We support families who need help most by reaching out to communities where illiteracy is entrenched and intergenerational. We have 7 Literacy Hubs in the UK. We lead national campaigns, raising awareness with compelling research and a commanding policy platform. Last year 46 businesses signed up to the Vision for Literacy Business Pledge.

4 Cycle of poverty

5 Literacy Hubs

6 What the Literacy Trust brings
Experience from other Literacy Hubs – each one individual - bringing national expertise to support a localised approach Experience in working across various sectors around a focus of literacy Extensive range of interventions to bring including – early years, primary, secondary, employability programmes Campaign – wrap around campaign to bring all interventions together and support with community engagement – linking with existing work to enhance impact Prioritising Nottingham for other bids by the Development Team

7 Impact - Hub examples School readiness: more children in Middlesbrough are achieving a Good Level of Development at the end of the EYFS, closing the gap with the national average from 22.6 percentage points in to 6.27 percentage points in 2015. Writing: in 2015 more of Bradford’s children and young people aged write every day or a few times a week outside of school (52.6%), compared to their peers regionally (39.7%) and nationally (44.1%). Reading: the number of KS2 pupils who enjoy reading in Peterborough has increased by 23.4% between 2014 and 2015, rising from 59.8% in 2014 to 73.8% in 2015.

8 Read On Nottingham Early Years
Transition between primary and secondary Literacy for employment and skills Boosting reading enjoyment

9 Year 1 activity Establishing the Campaign Launch networking
Early Years Early words together at two School readiness Dads reading selfie competition Primary to secondary transition Piloting transition focus in Clifton Working with Nottingham SSIF transition toolkit Literacy for employment and skills Words for work Media and communications campaigns to improve literacy and increase reading for pleasure NCH book giveaway Highfields Park book giveaway Wellbeing research Business breakfast Addo Food group Paul Smith Browne Jacobson Experian

10 Year 1/2 plans Notts County book swap Spaces for books
Christmas book giveaways Literacy Champions Skellig at Nottingham Playhouse Nottingham 100 Reads Story festival(s) Christmas grottos Literacy Champions Nottingham 100 Reads Literacy Festival(s) Penguin Random House

11 Questions Contact Emily Landsborough, Nottingham Hub Manager

12


Download ppt "Read On Nottingham 9 November 2018 T:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google