The global reading crisis is stark - across the world 234 million school-aged children urgently need access to quality education. Research shows that learning to read in a mother tongue language reduces dropout rates and make education meaningful, yet 40% of the global population still lack access to schooling in a language they know.
This gap is not just about literacy, but about equity, identity, and opportunity.
StoryWeaver, an initiative of Pratham Books, was launched in 2015 as an open-source,
open-license digital platform to put a book in every child’s hand, in a language they understand. In ten years, it has grown into one of the world’s largest multilingual libraries for children, with over 67000 stories in ~380 languages, reaching millions of readers globally. Recognised as a Digital Public Good in 2022, StoryWeaver embodies the FOSS ethos — built on open technologies, powered by open licensing, and sustained by community contributions.
This talk will trace StoryWeaver’s journey from a publisher to a platform to now thinking about a global commons for children’s reading. It will unpack how communities of writers, translators, illustrators, educators, and technologists have co-created and localised resources, leading to unexpected micro-innovations — from the first-ever written stories in oral languages to AI-assisted translations.
At its core, StoryWeaver is also a story of technology and community. Over the years, we’ve made our code public, collaborated with researchers to build native-language input tools, and developed white-label versions for partners like Room to Read. The next chapter is about growing a vibrant open-source community of developers, linguists, and educators who can co-build mission-driven, inclusive tech.
This talk will share how open infrastructure, community-driven innovation, and the power of commons can together unlock systemic change — so that every child can read, learn, and dream in their own language. It will also share some glimpses of the next chapter of StoryWeaver and how we may collaborate.
This talk will highlight how Digital Public Goods like StoryWeaver, grounded in FOSS principles, can spark meaningful change by reimagining access to children’s literature through open, community-driven models. It will reflect on StoryWeaver’s journey so far, and surface the opportunities and challenges of scaling this vision. The session will invite participants to imagine how vibrant, multi-stakeholder communities can come together to sustain and grow a global commons for children’s reading.
For more than six months, I've been interacting with the StoryWeaver team at Pratham Books. They have been keen to interact and engage with the FOSS community, to bring visibility to the creative commons-licensed childrens' books they create and the FOSS platform they use to deliver the content digitally. They delivered a talk at a Bengaluru meetup regarding the platform, and they engaged with the Code4GovTech community to build experimental features into their FOSS platform. Their work has created immense value and significantly improved the digital commons. They are interested in talking about the value that they have been able to create from CC-licensed content and FOSS, and they are also interested in sharing their difficulties engaging the FOSS community over the past many years., adding to the discourse at the conference this year.