Showing posts with label Chanda C.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chanda C.. Show all posts

Monday, June 06, 2011

The State of Cambodian Reading

Sunday, June 5, 2011
By Chanda C.
Originally posted at http://cambodianchildren.blogspot.com/

3rd Grade Reading (Video)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLm1rksMawU&feature=youtu.be

This is the story of an accidental discovery. Though I am not a researcher by any shape or form, this discovery was compelling enough that it merits, I think, sharing with the Cambodian public at large.

Starting almost a decade ago, I, in collaboration with some of my friends, have worked on creating reading books for Cambodian children. We divided the books into three volumes. As each volume was completed, I would go to Cambodia, publish it, and distribute it to poor children. In 2008, I distributed some books to a group of poor children living near my aunt’s house. Due to limited number of books, I gave the books to only those children who could read. The ones who could not read yet had to wait for next time. However, one courageous boy, who had just begun learning in the first grade, came up to me and asked if he could have a book to keep with him so that when he was able to read he would learn to read that book. Unable to turn down his request, I decided to give that boy a book and hope that he would keep his promise.

Earlier this year, after getting the final volume of the children’s books published, I went to visit my aunt’s home again and sought out that boy to whom I had given a book 3 years ago. He is in the third grade now. I told him that I had some new books that I would like to give him and his friends if he would mind going around asking them to come to receive the books. The boy went around the neighborhood and found a few of his friends to come and receive the books. As a way to test the children’s ability to read, I decided to ask each child to read me a story while I am recording them on my digital camera. As I was listening to the children’s reading one after another, I noticed that their reading ability varied greatly. As it is evidence in the video clip above, the boy (wearing red vest) to whom I gave a book 3 years ago could read very well while his classmates were performing rather poorly. I know this is a very small sample of subjects on which to conduct a study, but the finding has nevertheless given us an indication on how much difference supplemental reading books could make. I hope that this finding would generate some interests among Cambodian researchers to conduct a more systemic study to see how great an impact supplemental reading has on children’s ability to read. 

6th Grade's Reading
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ap9s7ctOgWo&feature=youtu.be

Monday, November 19, 2007

Apsara: A Khmer poem shared by Chanda C.

Click on the photo and poem to zoom in
Dear Editor:

Attached is a poem which I wrote as a tribute to an Apsara image I encountered near the main walk way of Angkor Wat promenade. The moment I saw her image, I felt something unsual about her facial expression. It was as if I have seen a distraught woman who had been violated and abused like a sex slave in modern time. I also thought of the carver(s) of this image. It was as if the carver(s) knew that her proximity to the walk way will make her an easy target for abuses by bad people once her protector(s) failed to properly protect her. In a sense, this Apsara could very well be the symbol of Cambodia which has been exploited, abused, and trampled upon by hordes of invaders over the past years.

Hope you can post this poem up for our readers to read.

Thank you.
Chanda C.