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Books Matter Because Your Reading Life Matters

This post was written by 起点传媒Ambassador听Lindsay Schneider.听听

 

Books fill the space in my classroom鈥攑hysically and metaphorically.

When students, parents, administrators, and colleagues alike enter room 1027, their eyes are immediately drawn to the (double-stacked and overflowing) bookshelves. Upon closer examination, their eyes are drawn to the wide diversity of books, characters, genres, storylines, and writing styles that fill the shelves and the pages.听

But this semester, I have no physical classroom.听

As I create new curriculum for virtual learning, my books sit alone in room 1027. The room where it all usually happens is quiet. Neither the dog-eared pages nor the shiny new covers will beckon students to become readers and whisk them away to new adventures.听听

My bookshelves have always been the heralds of an important message for those who enter my classroom: books matter. Your reading life matters. As a teacher, one of my most important aims is to help you find books that matter to you:

Choice reading has always been the cornerstone of the classes I teach. I believe my classroom provided students an imperative respite where they had protected time to read for pleasure every day. My students had daily, unfettered access and opportunity to explore and select books that capture their attention, their minds, and their hearts. Their engagement with the books in my classroom library allows them to consider and rehearse their responses to the complex situations, relationships, and people they encounter. Students begin to understand themselves, their peers, and the world around through a new lens, a lens through which they view problems critically and empathetically.

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Driven by the resolve to provide while developing lifelong readers who choose to read and an understanding that, I have curated an always-growing, diverse which shapes my instruction, my classroom culture, my students, and who I am as a teacher and a learner.听听

This leaves me with unnerving questions:

  • What comes next?
  • Who am I as a virtual teacher?
  • What must change this year and how do I remain true to the core values that have always driven my instruction?
  • What happens to the books and, more importantly, the future readers?听

Amidst a hurricane of ideas revolving around audiobooks, digital libraries, book talks, and covert book drop offs, I recall a hauntingly beautiful image鈥攐ne of my favorite from all of literature鈥攆rom Tim O鈥橞rien鈥檚 The Things They Carried.听O鈥橞rien writes, 鈥. . . it鈥檚 like being inside a book that nobody鈥檚 reading . . .听 an old [book]. It鈥檚 up on a library shelf, so you鈥檙e safe and everything, but the book hasn鈥檛 been checked out for a long time. All you can do is wait. Just hope somebody鈥檒l pick it up and start reading.鈥澨

My books will not be checked out for a long time. They will sit on a shelf, waiting. But they are still there. There is hope. My classroom library is filled with diverse stories鈥攆ictional, fantastical, and true鈥攂ecause, just as Tim O鈥橞rien concludes, I am trying to 鈥渟ave . . . lives with a story.鈥澨

And then, it hits me. The question is not how we get books in students鈥 hands.听

The question is how do we fill our students鈥 lives with stories? How do we introduce them to a wide diversity of characters, genres, storylines, and writing styles? How do we let students explore the stories that are happening all around them right now and the stories happening within their own lives?听

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The classroom library is on its own but our students are not. Our students have stories that need to be told, and this year more than ever, teachers can guide them to tell and write and share those stories. Let鈥檚 all work together this year to use our classroom libraries in a new way: let鈥檚 pull short mentor texts from them so students can hear other voices but focus on developing their own. Of course our students need to read, but they also need to rise up and write.听

Like O鈥橞rien and Hamilton, what if we created virtual classrooms where students can write our way out this year? In this sequel to a 鈥渘ormal school year,鈥 what if we include our students鈥 work at the forefront? What if the answer lies within their stories, not the already written books? They have had ample adventure in the past few months; let鈥檚 whisk them away to a new adventure where they are the ones teaching us.听

My classroom library this year will be compiled of my students鈥 diverse stories and voices and experiences.听

And this year, the first thing that catches someone’s eye when they visit my virtual classroom will be how my students鈥 voices and stories overflow into everything we do. My classroom library will be filled with new stories: ones of the bravery, heartache, joy, adventure, and more that my students possess.听

Because the classroom library was never about the books. It was about the readers who found themselves there. It was always about the students. It is always about the students.听

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Lindsay Schneider听teaches senior and freshman English in North Carolina. She is an avid reader and aspiring writer who is passionate about all things related to YA lit, building life-long readers beyond the walls of the classroom, integrating the arts into the English classroom, good coffee, baking, and the Wake Forest Demon Deacons. She is honored to serve as an 起点传媒Community Ambassador.

 

 

 

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