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‘A Man Called Bapu’
is published by Pratham Books
The Hindu
- 1st Feb, 2008 |
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Understanding Gandhi
Deccan Herald
- 1st Feb, 2008 |
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A Man Called Bapu:
D-Day arrives
Deccan Herald
- 31st Jan, 2008 |
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The power of now-and-here tales
Pratham Books Blog
- May 23rd, 2008 |
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No Kidding
Indian Express
- 12th May, 2006 |
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History with a
fun twist
The Hindu
- November 25, 2005 |
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LAUNCH ‘PARTY’
Deccan Herald
- October 16th, 2005 |
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Books on Indian History
Times of India
- October 5th, 2005 |
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History books for
children on the shelves
Asian Age
- October 3rd, 2005 |
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Interview with Rohini
Nilekani in Indianngos.com
by Mala Kumar
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READ, READ, READ
– FOR A GENERATION THAT READS
Deccan Herald
- September 6th, 2005 |
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Let’s bring
the book back
Deccan Herald
- April 2nd, 2005 |
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“Not all’s
well with kids”
The Hindu - October 1, 2004 |
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“Read Alert”
Economic Times
- September 26, 2004 |
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“Getting India to read, quickly”
Business Standard
- September 25, 2004 |
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“Books campaign launched”
Times of India
- September 23, 2004 |
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“Read India takes Pratham steps”
Deccan Herald
- September 23, 2004 |
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“Pratham Books unveils reading
campaign for rural children”
Hindu Business Line
- September 22, 2004 |
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“Photo Caption”
Asian Age
- September 21, 2004 |
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“No child’s play, but
kids deserve the joy of reading”
Times of India
- September 21, 2004 |
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| "Pratham
Books unveils reading campaign for rural children"
Hindu Business Line
– September 22, 2004
FAR from the vibrant visual merchandise displays featuring the Enid
Blytons and J.K. Rowlings of the world in metropolitan retail India,
preteens across many parts of the Indian' hinterland could soon
catch up with their dose of bedtime stories at unprecedented outlets
- the local paan shops!
Spearheading this initiative is a Bangalore-based publication house
called Pratham Books, which will soon extend its wide range of books
to paan shops and newspaper stands across rural markets of
the country as part of its distribution strategy. "While
distribution needs are better served through retail chains, they also
increase the cost of sales. On the other hand, availability at paan
shops and other centres central to rural distribution would enable
us to reach our target audience - children in the low income group,"
Mr Ashok Kamath, CEO, Pratham Books, told Business Line.
Pratham Books currently sells its titles though its 3,000 libraries
in the country, with Mumbai hosting around 450 of them.
As a part of its ambitious 'Read India' campaign, the publication
house has also lined up an ambitious plan of setting 10,000 libraries
in two years.
The campaign was launched in September 2003 and has engaged more than
3,00,000 children from 15 States in the past one year.
The movement was triggered after discovering that 50 per cent of school-going
children in the fifth standard in Government schools could not read
well, Mr Madhav Chavan, one of the founders of Pratham, said.
Pratham Resource Centre, a division of Pratham Education Initiative
Network, also conducted a dipstick survey in association with Indian
Institute of Rural Management and McKinsey on children between seven
and 14 across the country.
The survey revealed that 10 per cent of the children in this age group
were out of school while 24 per cent of the sample selected between
seven and 10 could read the alphabet but not words.
To encourage such children, this non-profit enterprise has created
an accelerated reading programme.
The first 50 'Read India' books based on this programme were released
in English, Hindi, Marathi and Kannada on Monday. The books are priced
between Rs 15 and Rs 20. The organisation plans to extend this series
to Urdu and Tamil by end of this year.
This series is predominantly interesting reading for children and
features short stories with animated pictures. The titles launched
were We are all animals and the Tell me how series,
besides a Marathi book called Wara (Wind).
Pratham Books is also scouting for companies to take part in this
social cause. It recently bagged a deal worth Rs 6.5 lakh from the
Dubai-based Round Table Club to release 19 books, Mr Kamath said. |
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Copyrights Pratham Books, 2005
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