2019
DOI: 10.5785/35-3-873
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Reclaiming the space for storytelling in Ugandan primary schools

Abstract: The purpose of this article is to highlight teachers' beliefs and practices towards storytelling in the mother tongue in Ugandan rural classrooms and the effect this could have on efforts to promote reading, such as the mother-tongue (MT) education programme in Uganda and the African Storybook Project (ASb). The article demonstrates that although there are initiatives to promote storytelling in the mother tongue in Ugandan primary schools to enhance reading and literacy acquisition, teachers are not prepared f… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…The Ugandan Education Ministry's curriculum reform since independence has likewise re-introduced storytelling by law. These reforms are focused on re-instituting local knowledge and teaching methods, as well as countering the influences of former colonial powers [15,83,90,112]. The African StoryBook Project 3 , a repository of stories in local African languages, illustrates the value of both storytelling as a method of knowledge creation and data sharing practices driven by community needs.…”
Section: Storytelling In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Ugandan Education Ministry's curriculum reform since independence has likewise re-introduced storytelling by law. These reforms are focused on re-instituting local knowledge and teaching methods, as well as countering the influences of former colonial powers [15,83,90,112]. The African StoryBook Project 3 , a repository of stories in local African languages, illustrates the value of both storytelling as a method of knowledge creation and data sharing practices driven by community needs.…”
Section: Storytelling In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%