By: Natasha Archary
Midday Joy listeners shared their fondest storytelling moments with Andy Maqondwana.
A dying artform as technology takes over and more parents look to the convenience of the internet before bedtime.
That or their favourite cartoons. Nothing compares to the simple yet wonderful past-time that reading to a child affords.
What’s more is that storytelling forms a big part of a child’s foundational learning phase.
Listen to the conversation on Midday Joy:
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The wealth of cultural knowledge that parents or adults in general can pass down to children in unlimited.
Sparking a passion in the child for books and developing a love for reading.
Enabling little ones to enter magical worlds with various characters and learn more about different experiences from across the world.
Benefits of storytelling
- Improves listening skills
- Develops comprehension
- Helps imagination
- Improves communication skills
- Fosters understanding
- Sharpens memory
- Makes learning fun
- Encourages curiousity
While books are a great place to start, sharing a family a tradition, folktale or cultural practice or belief can help a child answer questions about their identity.
Children are often curious about who they are and where they come from. No, we don’t necessarily mean delving into the birds and the bees but rather explain through story why certain traditions and customs are still practiced.
Paint a picture for kids about how, why and when the staple dish at home became the customary family meal served on special occasions.
Those are the kinds of stories that will live on for generations.
There was a time when storytelling formed a big part of every child’s life and is still considered one of the oldest and purest forms of teaching.
Also read: Kaya Drive – Unteaching white men are the main characters narrative to kids










