NLB aiming for more volunteers as in-person activities return, digital initiatives continue

(From left) NLB volunteers Rajalakshmi Kannappan, Yvonne Tai and Choo Jun Wei at the appreciation evening at Jewel Changi Experience Studio. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE

SINGAPORE - Libraries here are targeting to triple the number of volunteers to 6,500 by 2026, as physical activities resume and digital initiatives that were begun during Covid-19 will be continued as well.

The National Library Board (NLB) said there are new roles for volunteers in the works. For instance, volunteers will help in producing supplementary materials, such as tactile materials, to support the learning needs of people with disabilities at the upcoming Punggol Regional Library.

Between April 1, 2021 and March 31 this year, nearly 2,000 volunteers participated in initiatives such as online storytelling, the Documenting Covid-19 In Singapore project to archive people's experiences of the pandemic, and manning spaces in libraries.

Before the pandemic hit, libraries had more volunteers, who were also helping out with the physical activities.

NLB partnership division director Soh Lin Li said at the Punggol Regional Library that volunteers will act as library guides to recommend library resources to people with disabilities, facilitate online learning programmes and speak at book clubs.

Ms Rajalakshmi Kannappan, 32, a volunteer who has been making Tamil storytelling videos since 2020, said the programme will expand to in-person storytelling sessions next month at the Jurong Regional Library.

For now, the human resource and marketing director ropes in her husband and three children to film and star in these storytelling videos, which are uploaded to Facebook and YouTube once every four months.

What began as a way for her to spend quality time with her children during the pandemic and teach them Tamil has become much more.

"My friends, who are in other countries, don't have videos like this. When I share these videos with them, they play them to their kids," she said, adding that they look forward to new videos.

Ms Rajalakshmi believes that it is important for her children to speak their mother tongue, not just to communicate with their grandparents in India, but also to appreciate the lyrical beauty of the language.

Volunteer Yvonne Tai, 55, and her autistic son Choo Jun Wei, 26, see their work at NLB as a way to give back to the community.

Ms Tai, who is a housewife, has been volunteering as a storyteller for kidsRead since 2009 when her son joined the programme for children with special needs.

Mr Choo, a part-time store assistant at Enabling Village, said he enjoys telling stories to children with special needs because he can help them with their learning.

Ms Tai said: "He is more confident now. Volunteering has shown him that he is not just someone who receives help - he is capable of helping others as well."

NLB said there are new roles for volunteers in the works at the upcoming Punggol Regional Library. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO

At NLB's volunteers' appreciation evening held at Jewel Changi Experience Studio on Friday (June 24), NLB chairman Lee Seow Hiang thanked volunteers for their constant support, even during the pandemic.

He said: "We greatly appreciate the time, energy and passion of all our volunteers who are helping to build a reading and learning culture in Singapore."

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