The New Zealand Book Council and Booktrack have teamed up
with top Kiwi author Brian
Falkner to pilot a new initiative for young authors to create soundtracks
to e-books in the classroom.
Brian Falkner will visit Hobsonville Point
Secondary School in Auckland on November 13 as part of the New Zealand Book
Council’s Writers in Schools programme. He will lead students in
creative writing and creating synchronised soundtracks to e-books and stories
using Booktrack’s free education-focused platform, Booktrack Classroom. This auditory
approach to reading is designed to inspire an immersive, more engaged
experience for students. On the day, pupils will learn new writing techniques
and then how to layer and mix dynamic audio effects and soundscapes that
enhance written stories, bringing them to life visually, imaginatively and
aurally.
Each year the New Zealand Book Council’s Writers in Schools
programme connects more than 25,000 young New Zealand readers with New
Zealand’s best writers in classrooms from the inner city to remote rural areas.
Booktrack is a New Zealand company that has developed a revolutionary new
digital platform to enable authors and readers to create synchronised,
movie-style soundtracks that are automatically paced to match the story while
you read.
“As New Zealand’s leading national reading
charity we are dedicated to inspiring a love of reading because we know the
difference it makes to young lives,” says New Zealand Book Council CEO Catriona
Ferguson. “We are excited to see Brian Falkner use dynamic Booktrack technology
to enthuse and extend young readers’ pleasure and skill in reading and
writing.”
Booktrack has already proven it has the
power to deepen reading comprehension and engagement. Recent research from the
University of Auckland revealed that reading with Booktrack Classroom increased
students’ reading time by 30% and comprehension by up to 17%. “It’s great
to be able to team up with the New Zealand Book Council to share the Booktrack
Classroom experience to engage young New Zealanders. We hope that this will
help bring a whole new generation of youth back to the love of reading and
creative writing,” says Booktrack CEO and co-founder Paul Cameron.
This is a pilot initiative and further Writers in Schools
and Booktrack visits are planned, including an upcoming visit led by
award-winning author Ted Dawe at Auckland Girls’ Grammar School on December 4.
For more information about the New Zealand Book Council and
its Writers in Schools programme, please visit www.bookcouncil.org.nz. For further
information about Booktrack, please visit www.booktrack.com.
1 comment:
What a great initiative! Sounds like a fun way to get students engaging with literature.
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