Librarians Help! Summer Reading

Lately I haven’t been keeping careful track of the ways I get to help people on my job, but I know easily what I did today — rewarding Summer Reading Program Finishers!

Here’s a nice article on the importance of Summer Reading. http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/libdev/summer/research.htm

They’ve done the work for me in talking about how much library summer reading programs help kids, so I’ll quote from one section:

The Impact of Innovative Summer Reading Programs

Public library summer reading programs are one solution to the “summer slide.” In an analysis of summer learning programs by Miller (2007), it was found that children can benefit from “hybrid” programs which combine elements of youth development principles with academic enrichment. Summer reading programs in libraries exemplify this kind of hybrid program. Barbara Heyn (1978) found that “More than any other public institution, including the schools, the public library contributed to the intellectual growth of children during the summer.” Drs. Celano and Neumann (2001), in a study prepared for the Pennsylvania Library Association, monitored differences between children participating in public library summer reading programs and those involved in local recreational summer programs. They concluded that, in addition to literacy related activities, children in library programs benefited academically from story hours, arts and crafts, and other special events designed to enhance the reading experience.

Current research points out that increased summer reading reduces summer learning loss. Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, has stated “A key step toward stopping the summer slide, is the development and launch of high quality programs that take advantage of time outside the school day and year to help children learn, grow, and develop” (Elling, 2009).

This summer, we had thousands of kids finishing the summer reading program, and today I personally rewarded about fifteen happy kids. I’m so glad we’ve helped motivate them to add reading to their summer.

I also have some exciting news: I just received a promotion, so I am now officially Youth Services Manager at City of Fairfax Regional Library!

For two years, I have been out of youth services. I was Youth Services Manager at Herndon Fortnightly Library, one of our community branches. But in July 2010, the county suffered a Reduction in Force, and I got cut from the library because I didn’t have enough seniority. For six months, I worked in the Office for Children as a Management Analyst, but in December 2010, I got to come back to the library. However, I was not in Youth Services, where it was clear my heart was. Now, I did still get to work with young library members on the reference desk. And I admit I like all library work. And I have always written my blog and website entirely on my own time. (It does NOT reflect any official position of my employer, but is composed entirely of my own opinions.) So I still read plenty of children’s books and go to programs about youth services work at conferences.

But now I get to do it as my official job again! Honestly, this week as it sank in, I felt a little overwhelmed. For one thing, I had a bad cold, so it’s harder to think about possibilities. But as I start recovering, my mind is percolating with ideas and things I want to try. I do believe that Librarian is a job that makes a difference, and I’m looking forward to touching kids’ lives.

On top of that, last weekend, I took my youngest son to the College of William and Mary and dropped him off in the dorm. A phase in my life has ended; all the better to focus on my dream job and an exciting career!

Spread the word — Librarians Help!

Review of Everybody Sees the Ants, by A. S. King

Everybody Sees the Ants

by A. S. King

Little, Brown, and Company, 2011. 282 pages.
2011 Cybils Finalist
Starred Review

Since he was seven years old, Lucky Linderman has dreamed about his grandfather, who was Missing in Action in Vietnam so many years ago that Lucky’s father never had his father around. These dreams are dream-like, with dream-like impossible things happening in them. But when Lucky wakes up, he has things in his hand that he was holding during the dream. His grandfather gives him a cigar, for example, and he’s holding it when he wakes up. If he steps in mud, he’s dirty when he wakes up.

That’s not why Lucky’s gotten in trouble at school, though. Here’s how he explains what happened:

All I did was ask a stupid question.

Six months ago I was assigned the standard second-semester freshman social studies project at Freddy High: Create a survey, evaluate data, graph data, express conclusion in a two-hundred-word paper. This was an easy A. I thought up my question and printed out 120 copies.

The question was: If you were going to commit suicide, what method would you choose?

This was a common conversation topic between Nader (shotgun in the mouth), Danny (jump in front of a speeding truck) and me (inhaling car fumes), and we’d been joking about it for months during seventh-period study hall. I never saw anything bad in it. That kind of stuff made Nader laugh. And Nader laughing at my jokes meant maybe I could get through high school with less shrapnel.

I think you can see why this survey led to “concern,” but the fallout also leads to bullying. And he gets some answers to his survey from surprising places.

As the book continues, Lucky deals with more bullying and a trip with his Mom to Arizona to stay with his mother’s brother and wife, crazy Aunt Jodi. All the while, he’s dealing with these dreams that are somehow real. And the ants? Well, the ants are a sort of Greek chorus that Lucky sees, who watch and comment on his every move.

They first appear when he’s being bullied:

Ants appear on the concrete in front of me. Dancing ants. Smiling ants. Ants having a party. One tells me to hang on. Don’t worry, kid! he says, holding up a martini glass. It’ll be over in a minute!

All of this may sound strange, and it is. The book is strange, and the phenomena are never explained. But somehow it all adds up to a powerful and moving story about a boy growing up and learning to face tough things. By the end of the book, you’re completely on the side of Lucky Linderman, and confident that he’s going to make it through high school.

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/everybody_sees_the_ants.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Source: This review is based on an Advance Reader Copy I got at an ALA conference and checked against a library book from Fairfax County Public Library.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but I write the posts for my website and blogs entirely on my own time. The views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.