Scroll to explore events active on this date.
This sign in a store window in Dublin gave me a good laugh! At 18, we're all geniuses. By 30, we realize we're idiots! Photo LD Lewis July is a Jamboree of Events! Happy July. Like every month, I pick...
June's Gems Welcome to June. School is out, fun is in, and business tends to slow down for the next three months. Another June theme is children and keeping them engaged, learning and growi...
Prom, graduation, mothers, boating and barbeques are several themes in May. Along with October, May tends to be one of the most densely packed event months of the year. It's before the summer humidity and t...
DL Mullen, owner of Chicago's Semicolon Bookstore, launched National Black Literacy Day in 2021 to coincide with the month of Fredrick Douglass' birth and death to encourage more reading amongst black and brown youth. His initiative aims to address illiteracy rates in Chicago, especially among Black and brown communities, coincides with Black History Month.
Mullen's petition to Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Governor J.B. Pritzker seeks to gain wider recognition for the holiday. The day encourages community engagement in literacy programs, with Semicolon's #ClearTheShelves program playing a pivotal role by distributing free books to young readers. Mullen emphasizes the responsibility of Black-owned bookstores in fostering community literacy and hopes other bookstores will participate in promoting literacy and access to literature.
Between 2012 and 2014, various surveys indicated that an average of 23% of Black adults and 34% of Hispanic adults in the United States possessed low literacy skills. These literacy challenges have various causes, including historical abuse, inequalities, lack of education, and English not being a native language.
It is possible to be literate in one language and illiterate in another. Literacy in English is particularly difficult for people from non-Latin language backgrounds where the words, letters, and sentence structure differ entirely from their native language. To people from Russia, Asia, Greece, and many islands, as well as indigenous and African tribes that do not have an alphabet, English writing and grammar rules are very strange. Literacy has little to do with intelligence and everything about opportunity and familiarity. Most Americans would find themselves illiterate in other countries if they were to travel or emigrate, too.
Currently, this event does not have supporting documents.
Currently, this event does not have supporting images.
By using this site. You are agreeing to use of cookies. Learn more in our Privacy Policy
LEGAL: Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear attribution is given to Jubilee LLC and LEEPCalendar.com, with appropriate and specific direction to the original content (Page URL). Additional documents, embedded videos and additional image rights retained by their creators and are provided to increase understanding of the event or topic.
Jubilee LLC reserves the right to accept or reject inclusion of events in this calendar. The appearance of an event in LEEP Calendar does not imply endorsement of the event, nor the organization championing the event by Jubilee LLC, its stakeholders, customers or subsidiaries. All dates, contact information, URLs, addresses, and information relating to any event, promotion or holiday are subject to change without notice and should be treated as estimated. Jubilee LLC, our stakeholders, customers and subsidiaries cannot warrant accuracy. Users of this application are solely responsible for verifying actual event date with organizers and additional sources prior to committing resources, financial, human or otherwise.