Monday, February 13, 2017

Day 9: My Monday as the Librarian!

Today was a bit crazy! (Though I imagine most Mondays are!) Two classes come in very first thing in the morning, but hordes of books also come through the door right away! This is logical and great for the classroom teachers: the students have had the book all weekend/last week and are going to return it as part of the Monday routine. As a librarian, I am so glad Cindy has an aid! Toni was absent today (to try and help me feel what an only-two-member-staff would feel like), and we could barely keep up with the influx of books and needs of the patrons! To manage this rapid arrival of at least 100 books, Toni is in the habit of putting newly checked-in books on the main tables in the center of the library. Students know to look at those books first, especially if they wanted to read something a friend had turned in. The benefit to this method is that students immediately have access to books checked into the system and the popular books remain in circulation without the effort of correctly shelving them. For sure, the pressure of the moment is the drawback. With two twenty-something student classes coming to checkout books and the four to six classes' worth of books being returned all within the same hour: phew! I did have a headache before the first story time even entered the library! Without changing the schedule majorly, I am not sure how I would improve this Monday morning time. Toni and Cindy must have established a rhythm for this time in order to still be successful with it this far into the school year.

My own lessons didn't go as well as planned. I had chosen to read If Kids Ran the World, by Leo and Diane Dillon, because it showed how kindness and love could abound in the world through different acts of graciousness and care. The pictures are also rich, detailed, and respectful depictions of varied world cultures. I knew the text was a higher level than kindergartners, but thought that walking through the story together would still lead to a good read and moral lesson for the week of Valentine's.

NOPE. The kindergarten class I had first was not engaged in the message of the story, but instead focused on all the goings-on of the pictures. The students were excited about story time, but could not contain their outbursts about each page. Even the questions I would ask like, "Have you donated food to someone who needed it?" ended in strings of stories that they all wanted to share and have listened to. PHEW. I knew that something would need to change with tomorrow's kindergartners, but still wanted to try the book with 1st grade so that I could judge if this was merely an inappropriate level to read If Kids Ran the World with, or if the book itself should be binned from the "Story Time Together" pile.

This first grade class responded better on the understanding level of the book, but were difficult to keep focused during the reading time and lesson itself. Several of the students were trying to roll on the floor, or get up towards the bookshelves, or otherwise wander with their bodies and minds. About half of the students responded well to the questions and engagement of the book; the other half could not settle down and focus. Even when I tried to bargain with them about showing a video clip from the Book Fair, the rowdier students only stopped to think for a moment before resuming their activities. When the class was preparing to leave, both Cindy and the homeroom teacher fussed at the children for their behavior. I felt like I didn't get a good measure on If Kids Ran the World with those students, so I may try this book again tomorrow with a different first grade class.

Lessons from today or goals for tomorrow (in no particular order):
  • less complex stories are really okay for kindergarten
  • at the end of the day, it's one story time and can mean a lot, but the repetition and diversity of readers and reading material is more important
  • try If Kids Ran the World with Mrs. Guill's more strict-led class
  • choose a secondary book as the choice for kindergarten
  • ask or observe more discipline strategies for young children

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