Stratcomm aids Kanda schools
The Kanda Cluster of Schools are to benefit from a four-week reading and writing programme aimed at sharpening the reading and writing skills of junior high school (JHS) students.
This was made known at the launch of a programme facilitated by Stratcomm Africa, a total communications agency, dubbed, “Stratcomm Africa’s reading and writing project”, which forms part of Stratcomm’s 15th anniversary celebration.
The Kanda Cluster of Schools, made up of seven schools, will have resource persons from the company, as well as volunteers who will engage the students in pronunciation exercises, reading sessions, comprehension and essay writing.
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Stratcomm Africa, Ms Esther A.N. Cobbah, noted that without adequate reading habits, schoolchildren would not be able to develop good communication skills and message delivery.
“As you read and get better at it, you will no doubt attain a greater command of the English language. That will increase your own confidence as a human being,” she told the children.
Ms Cobbah added that since an act becomes a habit, later a character and eventually a destiny, schoolchildren must be guided to develop excellent reading skills while they were young.
The Circuit Supervisor of the Kanda Cluster of Schools, Madam Victoria Gyamara, was grateful for Stratcomm’s initiative and appealed to other corporate bodies to help inculcate good reading habits among schoolchildren across the country.
This was made known at the launch of a programme facilitated by Stratcomm Africa, a total communications agency, dubbed, “Stratcomm Africa’s reading and writing project”, which forms part of Stratcomm’s 15th anniversary celebration.
The Kanda Cluster of Schools, made up of seven schools, will have resource persons from the company, as well as volunteers who will engage the students in pronunciation exercises, reading sessions, comprehension and essay writing.
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Stratcomm Africa, Ms Esther A.N. Cobbah, noted that without adequate reading habits, schoolchildren would not be able to develop good communication skills and message delivery.
“As you read and get better at it, you will no doubt attain a greater command of the English language. That will increase your own confidence as a human being,” she told the children.
Ms Cobbah added that since an act becomes a habit, later a character and eventually a destiny, schoolchildren must be guided to develop excellent reading skills while they were young.
The Circuit Supervisor of the Kanda Cluster of Schools, Madam Victoria Gyamara, was grateful for Stratcomm’s initiative and appealed to other corporate bodies to help inculcate good reading habits among schoolchildren across the country.
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