Blocking Children From Reading

February 24, 2006

I had a great opportunity to attend a library media meeting in the district that I am student teaching in. I was full of excitement being in a room of people who were already in the profession I am proud to be part of soon. It was very interesting to see so many kinds of views on various topics. I do want to state that I respected all of their opinions. They have been in this profession longer than me.

With that being said, I was a bit discouraged by some of the Library Media Specialists’ views on how to handle students who have lost or damaged books. There were some who were of the opinion that you should just block their account preventing the student to ever check out a book again. This block can follow them through out their whole academic career. If I am understanding this correctly, a second grader can lose a book and have their account blocked all the way to his senior year of high school. Does anyone else think this is really unfortunate?

I know children books are very expensive and there is never enough money in the budget to pay for them. But are we not missing the whole point of why we are in this profession? Our number one priority is not putting the books first, but the children first. We are not a glorified keeper of the books, but we are here to make sure the kids are reading, learning, thinking and growing as individuals. How are we doing that by saying to them, “Sorry, you have failed to keep up with the book or you have failed to convince your parents to pay for this book, so you may never ever touch another book until you resolve this issue. Why would a kid ever come back to the library or ever think of picking up another book again. The last time they did, they had a really negative experience. I could not blame them. When this happens we might as well lock the library doors and go home.

This might seem a bit harsh, but I feel when librarians adopt this philosophy of librarianship, they are missing their whole purpose of the profession. Are we security guards of the books or are we teachers? Yes, there are going to be kids who are not going to get it right. That is why they are called kids. But this is a valuable teaching opportunity to show them how to be responsible and be good citizens. I know what you’re thinking, “Well Amanda, how many books are we going to lose to teach them this very important lesson? Three, six, twenty-four?” I don’t know. But do we really have the right to stop them from learning or to give up on them? Maybe we need to educate the parents on what we are trying to accomplish or spend more time with that child, so they understand to take better care of the book. Isn’t that our goal? Isn’t that our responsibility? When my life is through on this earth, I don’t want people to say, “Well, as a librarian she had 0% of lost books, but no child ever learned the love of reading.”

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