Opinion

The Calamity of the Disappearing School Libraries

From coast to coast, elementary and high school libraries are being neglected, defunded, repurposed, abandoned and closed.
The Calamity of the Disappearing School Libraries
Rows of books line book shelves at the Washington Heights public library in Manhattan on Dec. 10, 2014. Benjamin Chasteen/Epoch Times
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From coast to coast, elementary and high school libraries are being neglected, defunded, repurposed, abandoned, and closed.

The kindest thing that can be said about this is that it’s curious; the more accurate explanation is that it’s just wrong and very foolish.

Conducted with my graduate students, a 2011 survey of 25 separate statewide studies shows that students who attend schools with libraries that are staffed by certified librarians score better on reading and writing tests than students in schools without library services. And it is lower-income students who benefit the most.

This clear empirical evidence has had little impact on budget cutters, however. They act—mistakenly—as though there is no link between libraries and educational achievement.

Here are the numbers and the arguments to which they need to pay attention.

From coast to coast, elementary and high school libraries are being neglected, defunded, repurposed, abandoned, and closed.
Debra Kachel
Debra Kachel
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