This week the African Storybook Project sent out a newsflash showing their most recent story updates. We have displayed them below with links to their spot on the website.
Have you visited http://www.africanstorybook.org/, the home of the African Storybook Project (ASP)? It is a truly amazing, local website. The stories, which are all for the younger grades, can be read on site or downloaded to print and use. Their current collection of Featured Stories on the website home page is a great reflection of the ASP's growth and diversity after just one year in existence. The aim of the African Storybook Project is to provide Creative Commons-licensed stories for the children of Africa in all the local African languages as well as the languages of wider communication used on our continent.
Do click on the links below and read the English versions of their latest offerings shown below:
Have you visited http://www.africanstorybook.org/, the home of the African Storybook Project (ASP)? It is a truly amazing, local website. The stories, which are all for the younger grades, can be read on site or downloaded to print and use. Their current collection of Featured Stories on the website home page is a great reflection of the ASP's growth and diversity after just one year in existence. The aim of the African Storybook Project is to provide Creative Commons-licensed stories for the children of Africa in all the local African languages as well as the languages of wider communication used on our continent.
Do click on the links below and read the English versions of their latest offerings shown below:
Anansi and Turtle http://goo.gl/RrwRhV | A very tall man http://goo.gl/CRLB3R |
'M'e Maneo's pumpkin http://goo.gl/GLrlmH | Hen tricks Eagle http://goo.gl/59fRhl |
Elephant and Chameleon http://goo.gl/b3Smco | Colours of a rainbow http://goo.gl/qZez62 |
A Tiny Seed: The Story of Wangari Maathai http://goo.gl/HiuaCd | The animals dig a well http://goo.gl/lJIlxn |
No comments:
Post a Comment