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Free Explorer Bookpack for four-year-olds in East Lothian Council nursery provision

Published Wednesday 3rd February 10

Photo of boy reading

Every four-year-old in an East Lothian Nursery setting will be receiving an Explorer Bookpack filled with goodies to encourage a love of reading

Adam Ingram MSP, Minister for Children and Early Years, launched the Explorer Backpack at a special event at North Berwick Community Centre, East Lothian on Wednesday 3 February 2010.

East Lothian Council and the Scottish Book Trust have created a free Explorer Backpack filled with goodies for four-year-old children to help them to move from nursery to primary with skills and confidence.  The packs are designed to encourage a love of reading in the children who receive them, and offer parents and carers lots of tips and advice about encouraging their children to read and learn at home.  This is the first scheme of its kind anywhere in Scotland.

The project builds on the success of Bookstart packs and hopes to bridge the age gap between the Bookstart Treasure Chest pack for three-year-olds and the Bookstart Booktime packs for P1 children.   1,200 four-year-olds in East Lothian will receive an Explorer Backpack.  They will also be enrolled in the Backpackers Club and invited to take up Backpackers Challenges at their local libraries.

Children at schools round the county selected the books for inclusion in the pack.  In the end, they voted unanimously for Susan Rennie's An Animal ABC and Jill Murphy's On the Way Home

The backpacks include these books, and also a magazine offering advice and guidance to parents, a whiteboard set, and a Curriculum for Excellence leaflet.

Author Debi Gliori will also be at the event and will read from her book Stormy Weather.  Illustrations from Stormy Weather are featured throughout the parents' magazine included in the backpack.

Adam Ingram MSP, Minister for Children and Early Years, said:

'This initiative will help children discover the joys of reading and books at an early age - a love of reading which I hope will remain with them throughout their life and give them a strong head start in their education.'

East Lothian Council Education and Children's Services Convener Peter MacKenzie says:

'I'm really delighted that East Lothian Council is the first authority in Scotland to pilot such a scheme, because learning to love books and stories is such an important thing for any child.'

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