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Book characters come to life

Fouzia Van Der Fort|Published

Caradale Primary School foundation phase teachers came dressed as book characters, including Mary Poppins, Little Red Riding Hood and Goldilocks.

Caradale Primary School foundation phase teachers came dressed as book characters, including Mary Poppins, Little Red Riding Hood and Goldilocks.

Instead of donning their uniforms, Caradale Primary School pupils dressed as their favourite book characters from Monday September 6 to Friday September 10, for National Book Week.

Foundation phase pupils, pictured at the back, from left, are Aphinda Kani as a magician, Spiderman, also known as Bubukhosi Kenneth Mendela, and Noah Cramer dressed as a giraffe. In front are Kungawo Tinise as Queen Elsa, Megan Crainstein as a wizard and Uhuru Chulayo as a zombie.

The literacy awareness week coincides with International Literacy Day on Wednesday September 8.

Principal Ezra Carelse said this annual event promotes literacy, creates excitement around books and offers pupils a “whole new world” of characters.

Mr Carelse said more pupils were enthused to come to school dressed as their favourite characters as the week progressed.

“Many pupils did not know who Robin Hood or Peter Pan was, so we had to show them video clips, read the stories to them and introduce them to these characters,” he said.

Grade 4 pupil Amyoli Mekeni reads the story Spongezilla attacks with deputy principal Dawn Cockrill dressed as the character SpongeBob SquarePants.

Teachers came dressed up in character, introduced themselves to the pupils and went on to explain various aspects of stories, like character, plot and scene and mood setting.

Mr Carelse said these programmes positively impacted their annual literacy and numeracy testing, done annually by the Western Cape Education Department (WCED).

Teachers Raihaanah Richards and Nadiyah de Hahn are dressed as Mary Poppins and Little Red Riding Hood.

“Reading takes you places you’ve never been. To get lost in a book means it takes you away from your everyday mundane surroundings,” said Mr Carelse.

Deputy principal Dawn Cockrill dressed as Robin Hood on Monday, as Olaf the summer-loving snowman on Wednesday and bounced all over the place as SpongeBob SquarePants on Thursday.

Children’s faces lit up when they recognised the characters and this told teachers that they were on the right track, she said.

“Most of them are surrounded by crime and gangsterism and we want to bring something positive, open a new whole world, take them away from a negative environment, come to school, to a place of safety and fun,” she said.

“These stories help build our characters. It tells the children they can be Peter Pan and good people. It can also encourage them to write own stories,” she said.