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18 March 2022 | Story Rulanzen Martin | Photo Charl Devenish
Jaco Jacobs
Jaco Jacobs delivered the 35th DF Malherbe memorial lecture – a concise, fun lecture with a lasting message about the wonderworld of children’s verse and nursery rhymes.

DF Malherbe-gedenklesing Afrikaans

The 35th DF Malherbe memorial lecture donned a new, fun coat when the lecture was delivered by the well-known children’s book author, Jaco Jacobs, on 16 March 2022. Jacobs’ children’s verses and nursery rhymes, poems and stories were an ode to his hobby, his bread and butter, and his great passion – books for children and young people.


The topic of the lecture was On My Planet: The Wonderworld of Children’s Verse, presented by the Department of Afrikaans and Dutch, German and French. As the author of children’s books, Jacobs often speaks to audiences, but not in front of students or scholars. “With children, I talk about topics such as the pros and cons of your granny deciding to become a rock star, ways in which to steal a sheep at a church bazaar, and how it will feel to have spaghetti between your toes.”  

The purpose of the lecture was not to be a warning, a wake-up call, or a plea on the status of Afrikaans, but rather to discuss nursery rhymes as a subgenre of Afrikaans children’s and youth literature. After all, Jacobs has more than 20 years of experience in this subgenre. 

Rhymes and verse, even poetry, important from an early age

 “Indeed, a rhyme seems like fun, a rhyme seems like something that may wink, smile, and knows what red cold drink tastes like,” he says.  So, he poses the question: why then are children and teachers afraid of poetry?

The connotation to poetry reminds many people of the double periods in Afrikaans where they were trapped in a classroom, which, according to Jacobs, “smelled of sweaty socks, bone-dry pages filled with alliteration, assonance, and enjambment”! According to him, children are not afraid of poetry from an early age, since they “are born with an ear for poetry”; even before we attach meaning to it, we learn from a very young age to carefully listen to the rhythm of our mother or father’s voice. “Many studies have been done on the benefits of reading poetry to an unborn baby – they strongly respond to words they have heard while in the womb,” says Jacobs. 

Jacobs says a young child who ingests rhymes with its breast milk learns that language can be comforting – as with this rhyme: 

Slaap kindjie slaap
Daar buite loop ’n skaap
’n Skaap met witte voetjies
Hy drink sy melk so soetjies
Skapie met sy witte wol
Kindjie drink sy magie vol
Slaap kindjie slaap

Children’s verse plays an important role, because it usually includes nursery rhymes that are part of everyday playing. “The wonderworld of nursery rhymes are filled with sounds, rhymes, steps, rhythm, and patterns. Nursery rhymes sometimes need to be mischievous and test the boundaries a bit,” says Jacobs. 

The DF Malherbe memorial lecture is presented every second year. Previous speakers include Coenie de Villiers, and the language activist Bettina Wyngaard in 2018

Watch the lecture below: 



News Archive

School dropouts are more vulnerable to HIV
2010-02-02

 Prof. Dennis Francis

Children who drop out of school miss out on information about HIV/Aids and reproduction health, according to research conducted by Prof. Dennis Francis, Dean of the Faculty of Education at the University of the Free State.

The research entitled “Towards understanding the way out-of-school youth respond to HIV/Aids” included out-of-school youths as researchers and identified key issues and problems facing them. It covered youths between the ages of 14 to 18.

The study, funded by the Medical Research Council of South Africa, showed that schools played a vital role in providing credible information on HIV/Aids and ways to prevent it.

It also found that these out-of-school youths believed that HIV/Aids was a non-issue and deliberately avoided the subject, with boys being the main culprits.

The researchers found that these youths got their information on HIV/Aids from friends, community healthcare workers, religious leaders, family and other youngsters. The way they responded to HIV/Aids varied and often depended on their social context, effects on their self esteem and sense of power, according to Prof. Francis.

They also discovered that knowledge about HIV/Aids did not necessarily translate into action.

“School-going youth displayed similar difficulties in applying knowledge in real-life situations and lacked the tools for doing so,” he said. “But, unlike school-going youth, out-of-school youth did not have the option of using the school environment to speak about misconceptions.”

These finding will be presented at the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation-funded Hope 2010 Conference in India.

Media Release
Issued by: Mangaliso Radebe
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel: 051 401 2828
Cell: 078 460 3320
E-mail: radebemt@ufs.ac.za  
2 February 2010

 

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