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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsYou want to see how schools are being destroyed? Read this.
This is absolutely heartbreaking. How can kids possibly progress in school if they don't have libraries and books?
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-lausd-libraries-20140224,0,5992443.story
(snip)
In the sun-filled space at the Roy Romer Middle School library, thousands of books invite students to stimulate their curiosity and let their imaginations soar. There is classic "Tom Sawyer" and popular "Harry Potter," biographies of Warren Buffett and Tony Blair, illustrated books on reptiles and comets.
But the library has been locked. The tables and chairs have been empty. That's because budget cuts in the Los Angeles Unified School District have eliminated hundreds of library aides, leaving Romer's library unstaffed for months at a time over the last four years.
(snip)
Romer isn't the only L.A. Unified library that has had trouble. About half of the 600 elementary and middle school libraries are without librarians or aides, denying tens of thousands of students regular access to nearly $100 million worth of books, according to district data.
(snip)
L.A. Unified paid for library staff in every school before the recession began in 2008. Today, it provides librarians in high schools but leaves most elementary and middle school campuses to make tough choices on whether to use their limited discretionary funds on library aides, nurses, counselors or other key staff. At Romer, Serrano said, parents' first priority has been a full-time nurse. But she recently secured federal funds to reopen the library next month.
In the sun-filled space at the Roy Romer Middle School library, thousands of books invite students to stimulate their curiosity and let their imaginations soar. There is classic "Tom Sawyer" and popular "Harry Potter," biographies of Warren Buffett and Tony Blair, illustrated books on reptiles and comets.
But the library has been locked. The tables and chairs have been empty. That's because budget cuts in the Los Angeles Unified School District have eliminated hundreds of library aides, leaving Romer's library unstaffed for months at a time over the last four years.
(snip)
Romer isn't the only L.A. Unified library that has had trouble. About half of the 600 elementary and middle school libraries are without librarians or aides, denying tens of thousands of students regular access to nearly $100 million worth of books, according to district data.
(snip)
L.A. Unified paid for library staff in every school before the recession began in 2008. Today, it provides librarians in high schools but leaves most elementary and middle school campuses to make tough choices on whether to use their limited discretionary funds on library aides, nurses, counselors or other key staff. At Romer, Serrano said, parents' first priority has been a full-time nurse. But she recently secured federal funds to reopen the library next month.
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You want to see how schools are being destroyed? Read this. (Original Post)
KatyaR
Feb 2014
OP
Squinch
(51,014 posts)1. This, truly, is terrible, but it's way down the list of the worst things happening in schools today.
senseandsensibility
(17,136 posts)2. I really rely on the school library to instill
a love of reading in my students. We have software with tests on the books they read, and they get stickers on a chart for each one they pass. It's really a motivator! In my opinion, there is probably some funds to be cut from administration, especially at the district level, if it has come to this.
Dirty Socialist
(3,252 posts)3. But The Important Thing Is
The rich keep getting richer. /sarc