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August 24, 2021

Nurturing Leaders in the Library

Discover the libraries at the heart of St Jude鈥檚.

St Jude鈥檚 three schools are lively places. There is always laughter ringing out across the playground, or a song wafting down from a music room, or an exciting game of football being played on the sports fields, with accompanying shouts and blasts from a whistle.

To take a step into one of our three libraries is to take a pause from this hustle and bustle and enter into a calm, quiet place of focus. Students take advantage of this atmosphere for their studies, to browse the shelves or to get a recommendation from one of our trained library staff.

Mr Forehead started at St Jude鈥檚 13 years ago as a Library Guard. After a diploma and then a Bachelor of Teaching, he became our Primary Library Teacher. He鈥檚 never met another Tanzanian with the same job. 鈥淚t is not a common role,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 teach students how to utilise the library, how to find books, how to borrow and how to take care of the books.鈥

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Ravenous Readers: Mr Forehead helps his students borrow new books.

When students begin at St Jude鈥檚 in Standard 1 or 2 (the first years of primary school), it鈥檚 usually their first time in a library. 鈥淲hen they first arrive, they are so excited about the library,鈥 smiles Mr Forehead.

鈥淩eading definitely helps them to improve their English,鈥 he explains. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l see when they start, you give them a book and they鈥檒l just know one or two words, and then over time as we read more and more it just improves so much.鈥

Miss Sylvia is the Library Assistant at St Jude鈥檚 Girls鈥 Secondary School library. She takes a keen interest in her students to help them thrive in their first four years of secondary school.

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A Book and a Smile: Miss Sylvia is always ready to help her students find the perfect book.

鈥淢y students are big fans of novels. The most popular books are the Twilight books by Stephanie Myer and Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare,鈥 she smiles. But Miss Sylvia isn鈥檛 content to leave her students to read only the most popular books. 鈥淚 get to know students and staff members, so when they visit I can tell them about the certain things they鈥檙e interested in. So, students start to think, 鈥極h, Miss Sylvia is really interested in me,鈥 and it makes them feel important, that I care about them.鈥

In the primary library, Mr Forehead gets creative to encourage reading. 鈥淭he students have reading competitions and then they make presentations about what they have read. With the young ones especially, I give them stickers when they finish a book, which gives them a lot of motivation,鈥 he says.

Mr Forehead鈥檚 enthusiasm for reading is particularly remarkable given that his own school did not have a library. 鈥淲e had a few books in boxes which were kept in the headmaster鈥檚 office and if you wanted to borrow a book, you would have to ask the headmaster. A year might go by without anyone borrowing the books and then you would find they had been spoiled,鈥 he recalls.

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More than Books: Students from St Jude鈥檚 Girls鈥 Secondary School catch up on the news during lunchtime.

For the last two years, SCIS (Schools Catalogue Information Service) has supported St Jude鈥檚 by donating their annual licensing fee and it鈥檚 made a huge difference in our libraries. SCIS creates easy-to-download catalogue records for school libraries and is used in libraries all over the world.

鈥淲ith SCIS, cataloguing is so much faster,鈥 enthuses Miss Sylvia. 鈥淎ll the information about the books is there. You can just click, download, and it鈥檚 all there and all correct. It has saved so much time.鈥

SCIS also assisted library staff with a series of webinars in 2020 to help make the most of everything SCIS has to offer. In a country without a huge network of libraries, St Jude鈥檚 is grateful to have a link to experts in Australia for inspiration and learning.

St Jude鈥檚 students are such ravenous readers that our librarians are regularly faced with a familiar challenge. 鈥淭he biggest challenge is having enough books. The students love to read, and they鈥檝e almost read all the books,鈥 says Mr Forehead.

Over the years, St Jude鈥檚 libraries have been stocked with books donated by generous visitors and international supporters who have sent books to Tanzania. The school prepares a 鈥榳ishlist鈥 of requested books each year so that visitors who wish to donate books can bring those which will be most useful.

Unfortunately, COVID-19 has reduced the school鈥檚 annual international visitors from around 1,100 to almost zero. And no visitors means no new books. As the COVID-19 pandemic recedes, St Jude鈥檚 hopes to add new stock to its libraries.

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Space to Study: Students benefit from having their own textbooks and calm study space in the library.

Even with the challenges they face, St Jude鈥檚 libraries have an important role at the heart of each school. They鈥檙e a place for students to discover new worlds, to catch up on the news and to study, uninterrupted. Unlike the majority of Tanzanian students, who are not afforded the advantage of a school library, St Jude鈥檚 students can enjoy all of the benefits a library offers, thanks to supporters from all around the world.

If you would like to donate books to St Jude's, please contact us to find out what books would best suit our needs. We can arrange for staff or visitors to bring them to Tanzania. Or, you could even visit yourself! We would love to welcome any experienced librarians for short-term volunteer opportunities in our libraries. Please contact info@schoolofstjude.co.tz

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