When my daughter was in first grade, she came home every
Monday with a stomachache. I didn’t tumble to the source of said tummy troubles
until I shadowed her one day. Here’s what I learned: our sweet, sensitive,
creative, book loving first grader had the librarian from hell.
Monday was first grade library day. And that time in the
library was all about putting the books back EXACTLY where they’d been found
and only reading what had been given you by the librarian. And god forbid the
librarian catch you touching a book out of your reading ability.
Needless to say, I began volunteering in the library every
Monday, doing everything I could (in a kind yet completely subversive way) to
counteract the toxic impact of that horrible person who called himself a librarian.
Which leads me to today: the end of this year’s run of the
feature I call From the Office of the
Future of Reading. Every time I uploaded a post from one of the amazing
teachers/librarians who volunteered to share their thoughts in this space, I would
sigh: if only. If only. Every single one of the past year’s 80+ guest bloggers
would’ve made my daughter’s grade school library experience sheer heaven. If
only.
Consider all of the pressures on today’s educators: the push
to focus on standardized testing, the pull away from reading aloud; constant
criticism of public education along with constant reduction in funds for
same. These are merely the tips of the
iceberg.
And yet.
In this past year 80+ busy, overworked and underpaid
teachers and librarians took time from their families to write guest posts for
my blog simply because they cared so much about connecting kids and books.
These outstanding educators gave up precious free time to crank out 300-500
words about what they’d done to build a community of readers through book
clubs, trailers and book-related crafts. I couldn’t offer any payment and yet
they stayed up later than was healthy for them to compose essays that shared
their passion for poetry, breakfast book clubs or Skype visits.
The past two years of hosting teachers and librarians on
this site have allowed me to sleep more sweetly, more deeply, and with pure
hope. How could I not sleep soundly with the knowledge that so many great
people are working so hard to ensure a nation of readers? A nation of folks who
will find the will to treat others kindly, who can unravel slogans to uncover
truth, who discover that one plus one equals the power to change god-awful
circumstances, whether it be sweat shop conditions or gun control laws or rules
of common courtesy.
I am struggling because I don’t know if I can continue this
feature. It requires a lot of time and energy. I’m cogitating upon what to do
next (ideas and suggestions welcome). Regardless of whether or not this
feature, From the Office of the Future of Reading, continues, I know the
efforts to protect and energize the future of reading will persist.
I know because I’ve seen what our teachers and librarians
can do. And they can work miracles.
With a full and grateful heart, I sign off for the summer:
Warmly,
Kirby
Dear Kirby, please enjoy your summer! I realize the amount of work this must be, but know that (and I'm probably speaking for many of readers) how important these posts are in today's education world. Whenever I saw a new post, I was excited to read and connect with your guest blogger. From the posts I gained inspiration, great ideas, and knowledge that there were so many other great teachers, librarians, and authors out there working very hard to create and sustain love for reading in children the world over.
ReplyDeleteMaybe to decrease the workload, only do 1 post a week? I would hate to lose this important literary voice.