Blogger: Erika Stuart
Libraries are an important part of
our education. From the time we are in Kindergarten through our college years,
we use our school libraries to help us excel further in our education by
reading books and improving comprehension to doing research for homework and
papers.
The school library has always been a
safe haven for the quiet and the curious. In recent years though increase in
technology has affected the use of school libraries. Many students in high
school only enter the library if their class goes in to use the computers. Students
now tend to do their research at home online. While some people may think this
advancement makes libraries useless, it should actually make them more
important. Librarians need to teach students how to do research correctly. Many
students will google their topic and use the first things they see as
legitimate sources, and while some information on the internet is accurate,
these students need to be able to find credible sources. This need for educated
research is only one reason school libraries are still important.
Budget cuts have also negatively
affected school libraries in an article called Advocating for the School Library Budget, Published by Teacher
Librarian, it stated “The library budget in too many schools consists of
whatever can be begged, borrowed, or purchased through fund-raising or
grant-writing efforts.” This creates a problem because if the school library has
little to no budget, it can’t afford the databases and resources that students
rely on for their education much less new materials like books for the students
to read. Some school library budgets have been cut so much that they even share
librarians. I recently met a library technician who works at two different elementary
schools in the same district; alternating them every other week. One week the
library is open and then closed the next, on top of that there is no librarian
on-hand. The school is part of a program with other schools in the district
where they have one librarian who monitors all of the schools. The technician
at the school has to write up a book list and send it to the librarian who
approves them or denies them. The librarian may visit the school library once
in a year to check up, but other than that the school libraries are run by the technician.
In 2011 the New York Times did an article talking about how schools are squeezing out librarians due to budget cuts. People
don’t seem to realize how important School libraries and librarians are. They
are letting this useful asset to education slip between the cracks.
References:
Kachel,
Debra. "Advocating for the School Library Budget." Teacher Librarian,
vol. 45, no. 2, Dec. 2017, pp. 48-50.
Santos, Fernanda. “Schools Eliminating Librarians as Budgets
Shrink.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 24 June 2011, https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/25/nyregion/schools-eliminating-librarians-as-budgets-shrink.html
Siu-Runyan,
Yvonne. “Public and School Libraries in Decline: When We Need Them.” The
Council Chronicle, Sept. 2011.
1 comment:
Erika! I love that you point out the role librarians play as teachers of information literacy. Students may not want to or be able to physically move into the library space. They may like the comfort of being behind their iPads, or the library might be closed, as you mentioned, due to being understaffed and underfunded. You hit the mark when you said this resource is slipping through the cracks.
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