Friday, December 22, 2006

Happy Holidays and Happy Reading

Today is the last day of school before our Christmas/Winter break. I'm looking forward to attacking my huge pile of books that I want to read. I have 33 books on my bedside table to read, 3 of which I've already started. I pick up different books depending on my mood. Somedays I'll be interested in reading non-fiction such as history or education, another day I need a good British mystery such as P.D. James. Young adult books and children's books are always on my list, especially good fantasy stories. I had been proud of myself for bringing my large pile under 20 titles this fall, before I attended FAME that is and purchased many more. Now, I have to decide which books to bring to Canada to read over the holidays. My husband gave me 3 books for Christmas (we opened our presents early so we don't need to take them up north)so those books will probably go in my suitcase.

Many students have been in here returning books and taking out new ones to read over the break. It's been great to see the large piles of books some are taking out to ensure they have enough reading material. It will be a very busy day on Jan. 9 when these books are all due back.

I hope everyone has a very Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and a great holiday. I'm looking forward to hearing about the books everyone has read, and I'll have some to talk about as well.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Organizing by Genres

Okay, I must like making more work for myself.

I had been thinking about rearranging the fiction section of the middle school area at Plantation Key School for the last couple of years. Now that I'm at the high school, I have liked the idea even more. Most students come in and ask for a book "just like this one". I have noticed that, like many adults, teenagers prefer to read one genre. Bookstores already know this, and they shelve their wares by genre with sections for mystery, romance, fiction and literature, history, graphic novels, art, health etc.

Coral Shores has an interesting layout of shelving. Due to study rooms and windows, the shelving is broken into many different sections, with fiction along three outside walls and the non-fiction stacks in the middle of the room. With fiction books being so spread out along the far walls, it is sometimes difficult to find the books. (Of course, more signage would help, I'm going to look into signs that hang from the ceiling as there is little wall space).

The moment that really got me thinking about this was at the FAME conference. While attending the Teens Can Read workshop, one of the presenters discussed how she had rearranged her Media Center and circulation doubled. Although worried about information literacy and teaching students who to find books, I realized that students would still be practicing these skills in order to find the location of the books. The teachers questioned thought rearranging the library would be a good idea, as did most of the students.

Now, I need to decide what genre to place each book in, order labels and apply, change the books in the computer, and rearrange the books. That should keep us busy here in the library for quite a while. Oh well, I like to be busy!

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

The Library Media Center

Here is a picture of the Coral Shores Library Media Center. We have approximately 13,000 books, 17 computers, 3 OPAC stations, magazines, books in Spanish, and we have started a Graphic Novel collection (see previous posts). The school building is only 4 years old, so everything is nice and new.

Florida Teens Read again

Congratulations to Anna who read all 15 of the Florida Teens Read titles. There are several students who are close behind her!

I just finished Alt. Ed. by Catherine Atkins. Good story about a fat girl who learns to stick up for herself. After getting in trouble and almost expelled, she is asked to attend a session with 5 other students afterschool once a week. Her Alt. Ed. session teams Susan up with the boy who was bullying her, a cute jock, a Christian cheerleader, a gay boy, and a girl with a bad reputation. Susan isn't getting any support from her widower father, and her brother is never home. Can she survive 12 weeks of Alt. Ed?

Off to the next books on my list...

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Florida Teens Read

If you're not familiar with the Florida Teens Read program, I'd suggest dropping by any high school library media specialist or looking here for more info, http://www.floridamedia.org/teensread/teensread.html. This is a great program, only in its second year. It builds upon the Sunshine State Young Readers Award offered to grades 3 through 8. The format is very similar, students read a minimum of 3 books (out of up to 15 nominated titles) and then vote for their favorite in April.

So far I've read 8 of the 15 titles for this year, and have enjoyed every one. I'd have to say my favorite at the moment is My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult, a heart wrenching story about a 13 year old girl whose sister has a rare form of leukemia. Kate is going to die if she doesn't receive a kidney transplant, and Anna is a perfect match. Anna was actually conceived in order to be a donor for Kate, and now, after 13 years of giving up platelets and bone marrow, she has had enough, and sues her parents for medical emancipation of her own body. But if she wins, Kate will die.

Twilight by Stephanie Meyer has been VERY popular here. I haven't read it yet because I never have a chance to grab it! As soon as it comes back, someone checks it out again. Alex Flinn has another book on the list, Fade to Black, and she is always a popular Florida author. The Printz honor book Fat Kid Rules the World surprised me, it was a touching story about two troubled kids who want to help the other by forming a punk rock band.

I'm off to grab another book from this list, talk to you later!