Portable Magic

"Books make people quiet, yet they are so loud.” – Nnedi Okorafor

Category: Discussion forum

Censorship in the school library

Jacobson’s article on the SLJ Controversial Books Survey 2016 notes that, in America, the vast majority of challenges comes from the parents of school children.

This made me remember something about the American context, which I learned at a book industry expo in Toronto. At a panel on Young Adult books, when discussing style and content between Canada and the U.S., a Canadian author explained that publishers of YA novels are very conscious of and seek the approval of the Bible Belt mothers (this was some years ago, I’m paraphrasing here).

That is, the values of the more conservative Southern states can influence the books that get published, and what’s included in them, because those mothers are more likely to read the YA novels themselves before deciding if they’re ‘suitable’ for their children to read.

I found that very interesting and insightful, and while not all publishers (and not all books) are catering to this demographic, it still speaks to the power of the book-buying public (in this case, predominantly white Christian mothers).

I don’t think we have this ‘issue’ in Australia, and I think things are changing in America, too. But I have found that Australian YA is a lot grittier and more realistic than American YA (having read a fair bit). Jacobson mentions that John Green’s Looking for Alaska is frequently challenged; while I don’t like the book myself (I just think it’s not well written and is overly dramatic), it has the ‘gritty’ content lacking in so many other books. The Color Purple is also frequently challenged in American schools, I remember – especially as it’s so often taught there.

Here, now, I think there’s a new issue emerging: mental health. Social media posts often come with a “content note” or “content warning” or “trigger warning” – people want to talk about serious issues but they’re also more aware of potentially making readers’ mental health issues worse in the process. This could be a new area that prompts self-censorship, perhaps.

Last year I read (and loved) Grabriel Tallent’s novel My Absolute Darling. I gushed about it to my TL and we talked at length about the difficult subject matter that forms a key part of the protagonist’s coming-of-age journey. And it really is awful stuff. But our library – which serves Years 11 & 12 – also caters to the staff, and has no real age limits. Resource selection is carried out carefully but staff recommendations are readily catered for. We wouldn’t put, say, Fifty Shades of Grey on the shelves, but a novel dealing with rape/sexual abuse and coercive control is different.

And yet, I’ll admit I was nervous about this. Particularly when one of our school psychologists emailed me to alert me of the tricky content of this particular book – she knows better than me just what awful situations our students might be experiencing. The rates of anxiety are high at our school – partly due to it being a senior secondary college with many high achievers, and partly due to the high levels of support and openness that are being fostered in Australia now. ‘Wellbeing’ and ‘wellness’ are the new buzz words in education departments.

I’m interested in how much this awareness factors into self-censorship, or whether it’s simply absorbed into the idea of a ‘balanced’ collection: that there are many resources to guide and help etc (for instance, we have a whole section called “Life Guides” for books on sexual identity, mental health, stress and anxiety, wellbeing etc.).

References

Jacobson, L. (2016). Unnatural selection: More librarians are self-censoring. School Library Journal, 62(10), 20-24

Thinking about: The limits of digital resources

Pros and cons of bundled sets (e.g. database or Standing Orders service)

The school library context plays a necessary role in determining whether the Teacher Librarian should choose to invest in bundled sets. Often the TL will trial something for a year to collect data so as to decide whether it’s viable to continue the investment.

The chief pro of the bundled set is convenience. This can be broken down into

  • time-saving
  • discounted cost
  • ease of access (possibly. Possibly not)

A Standing Orders service, such as Scholastic Books, provides pre-selected print fiction titles to school libraries. These may be quite popular, current titles and authors, which could be useful in a primary school.

But surely part of being a TL is having a broad, deep knowledge of and interest in literature and literacy? It strikes me as unwise to leave such an important area of development and learning in the hands of a commercial company. You would need to have multiple Standing Orders, with different companies, and it’s doubtful you would save much in the end.

Journal and other online databases – such as EBSCO and Britannica – are more useful, but require active teaching for students to be able to access and use them successfully. Without active teaching, students won’t even know they’re there and will simply use Google (which, as we know, offers quick but rarely great resources; and for primary students, not age-appropriate).

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Pros and cons of online content not owned by the library

The question here was what kind of ebook access to pay for for the school library; I’d like to say: be careful of investing too much in it at all.

Everyone thought e-books were going to ‘kill’ the print book. Hasn’t happened; print books are even more popular now than before. Technology changes rapidly, meaning that the Kindles my school library has stashed in the tech store room are collecting dust because they’re redundant. But the way our brains prefer to process and access information doesn’t change nearly so quickly.

My school library has a subscription to Wheelers Books, which provides access to a wide range of fiction titles, mostly older ones, definitely the classics. According to our data, hardly anyone ever uses it so we’re considering not renewing the subscription next year.

Both our fiction and our non-fiction sections get quite a lot of use. Yes, students – and staff – will also do a quick Google search, but when you need something more substantial, more in-depth – better quality, for sure – nothing beats a paid-for resource written by someone who knows their stuff.

When the wifi network crashes, you can still read the book. And gosh it pains me to see students hunched over the little screens of their smart phones, trying to read text.

I have maybe one student in every class who chooses to use the ebook edition of the text we are studying, but it’s useless for actual studying purposes. You can’t flip to find the page with the quote you need, for a start, and the distractions that come with having phones out… We have a statewide mobile phone ban in the classroom and it’s an important one.

Several of the articles were out-of-date already, in saying that ebooks are popular. McEwan, publishing in 2018, is more accurate in pointing out the limitations of online resources.

When it comes to non-fiction, an online version is impractical. Our art students browse the books till they find what they’re looking for (and art books don’t go out-of-date as they’re not ‘factual’ in that sense) and then make colour copies so they can create their journals. It’s harder to browse, to find artists whose style you admire and are inspired by, with ebooks.

Students and staff at my school request books, and we buy them. We promote them, visually and physically, incorporating them into displays. They are searchable on our OPAC. And there’s nothing wrong with simply heading to a particular Dewey section and seeing what else is on the shelf.

The problem is, of course, budget. I work at a large public senior secondary college and our library budget is generous compared to most schools. I would still argue, though, that it’s better to slowly build up a good selection of quality titles, and use inter-library loans, than to pay for access to ebooks in ownership or subscription form. But if you do, you’ll need to find inventive ways of drawing attention to them. As with the success of Google, humans do tend to go for the easy grab right in front of them: the print book, with the eye-catching cover.

There’s a lot of expectation on Teacher Librarians to keep the school library ‘current’, and accessible to all. While worthy, there’s also the danger of investing too much in what turns out to be a passing trend – like those Kindles. But perhaps, considering how much we weed from the print collection, that, too is simply the nature of the library?

References

McEwan, I. (2018). Trending now. Teacher Librarian, 45(3), 50-52.

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