Tuesday, January 17, 2012

MLK Day 2012

MLK Day 2012 was a success! We cleared out the book cases, cleaned the book cases, and started painting them a wonderful blue! We also got plenty of book sorted, and some donated books processed! 

We will be planning a few smaller volunteer events in the next few months to finish the painting, and to go through the book collection again. Weeding a library is a lot harder than it sounds!!

 The day begins! All the book cases empty!

 Rowen students who came out on their day off to help!

This little guy was so proud of himself - though I'm sure mom won't be pleased about the paint on his shirt!



 Book sorting.


 Books to keep in the library!

 New color on the book shelves!

 The corner in front of the librarian's desk!

 New and old colors!


All cleared out and ready for paint!




Thank you to everyone who came out and helped!

Special thanks to:
Lisa Doi 
Jimmy Bereolos
Theo Thompson
Megan Trainer (and Tim!)
Ty Gambrell 
Kathy Barnes 
Jeff Hammond
Deirdre Childs







Friday, January 13, 2012

School District Cuts

Kristen Graham of the Philadelphia Inquirer is writing that the School District plans to announce even more cuts next week in order to balance their budget (or at least, get it close to balanced??).

She uses Cook-Wissahickon School as an example of what most schools in Philadelphia have already given up due to budget cuts, most prominent of course to us at Library Build: the librarian. And with the librarian, no budget for the school library.

The fight for public school libraries, and public school educational resources gets harder every day here in Philadelphia.

Service Comes in a Variety of Shapes

The plans for MLK Day of Service 2012 are set in stone now, and our projects are ready for completion! Next week we will have a great series of stories and pictures about our (intending) successes on MLK Day, so stay tuned!

Also, I wrote the blog post recently about what people can do to support their local school libraries. Here's another update to that. This week I was given the link to a petition to improve and create school libraries in all public schools: "Ensure that every child in America has access to an effective school library program". Click here to check it out!

The petition is posted on the White House's website - you can check it out - and plenty of other petitions that the American people are interested in.

Petitions like this are a useful way to get the word out about the struggle for libraries in public schools - the more people it reaches, the more people will support the cause.

Have a great weekend!



Thursday, January 12, 2012

Official Press Release!


Rowen Elementary School Celebrates
17TH ANNUAL GREATER PHILADELPHIA MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY OF SERVICE

Philadelphia, PA– Rowen Elementary School, EducationWorks, and Library Build will join together to make significant improvements to the school at the upcoming 17th annual Greater Philadelphia Martin Luther King Day of Service. This is the first time ROWEN ELEMENTARY has ever been open to celebrate the day.
             Volunteers will be working to revamp Rowen’s School Library, to paint the doors in the building, to clean inside and outside the building, and to add portraits to the school’s “Wall of Achievement”. Under the first-year leadership of Principal James G. Murray, Jr., this year represents a milestone for a school, which has never before participated in the Day of Service. With the involvement of two non-profit agencies, EducationWorks and Library Build, Rowen seeks to establish a new tradition of service in commemorating the day. The Greater Philadelphia King Day of Service includes projects throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware that includes participants of all ages.
The national King Day of Service was created in 1994 through federal legislation co-authored by former Pennsylvania U.S. Senator Harris Wofford and Atlanta Congressman John Lewis, both veterans of the civil rights movement with Dr. King.
Greater Philadelphia Martin Luther King Day of Service, founder and director Todd Bernstein, who is also president of Global Citizen, announced that a national record 85,000 volunteers are expected to participate in some 1,300 community service projects throughout the region on Monday, January 16th, King Federal Holiday. This represents an increase of some 10,000 volunteers and one hundred projects from last year’s turnout. 

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Serving your Local School Library

As we plan for an amazing 2012 Martin Luther King Jr Day of Service, what are some ways that you can help out your local school library?

- Ask local businesses to put out boxes for a book drive
- Donate a few of your own books to the library
- Purchase a set of books that you loved as a student and dedicate them to the school library
- Start a parent group dedicated to raising money for the school library (or just a community group focused on the local school library if you aren't a parent!!)
- Ask local home improvement stores for donations of paint and other accessories so that you can spruce up the school library


These are just a few of many, many ideas of how you can help out any school near you!

Friday, January 6, 2012

Audio Books Budget

More budget cuts to Philadelphia's library system has resulted in a huge cut to Philadelphia's collection of audio books meant for the blind or others with vision impairments. There is a branch of the Free Library especially for the audio collection (on 8th St in Society Hill) that will now lose half its employees while most of the collection will be moving to... Pittsburgh? Apparently the state wants to consolidate its audio collection, which means that is Philadelphians want or need audio books they have to wait for up to a week to get it.

Now, waiting for a week to get a book from another location is not a huge deal. But I think this says more about whats going on with the state's education and library budgets than anything else. Over time these library budgets are just going to keep declining, as will services to those who need them. More librarians are going to be cut - seen as expendable to the process.

Yesterday the School District had to announce even more layoffs - and in light of the budget crises in this state, some cuts are good. But there continues to be the bleeding of services that are important to basic education - libraries. I'm of the opinion that we can't wait around for the state, local, or even national government to fix these problems. Because, guess what, they won't. We need a new way to solve these problems - before its too late.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

The continued economic decline of the PSD

This isn't a cheery post to get us started in the New Year, but there aren't really cheery things going on in the Philadelphia School District - or other PA school districts for that matter.

Despite layoffs last June (of which I was a part of), the Phila School District is still trying to shed services in order to balance the budget (or at least get close to balancing that budget?), and before Christmas, layoff notices went out to nurses, bus drivers, etc. In total, the Philadelphia Inquirer said about 1,400 people would most likely be laid off.

Now, I'm not going to use this space as a forum to talk about what the District did wrong - I have no idea how they spend their money, or who (if anyone) is to blame. What I do want to comment on, is how students are going to be able to keep learning when these cuts are made. It's of no surprise to anyone who reads this blog that school libraries in Philadelphia have been slashed so many times that more than 60% of school's don't have a functional library.

And the main reason that even some schools in Philadelphia still have a library? The Philadelphia Teacher's Union demands (its in their contract) that schools which serve more than 1,000 students have a library with a librarian.

With cuts being made to janitors and bus drivers - vital jobs in a school district - you can be certain that librarianship positions are not coming back any time soon, and neither will spending on school libraries.

Even more heartbreaking is recent news that a school district in Chester is literally out of money. Not just that they are short of money - no, they are actually out of money and won't be able to pay their teachers soon. How on earth is this even possible? Apparently they have appealed numerous times to Pennsylvania, but Gov. Corbett and the Secy of Education are unmoved saying that the Chester-Upland District took control of its district from the state in 2010 and that they misused all funds.

It does seem like PA is being a little heartless here, but then again, how on earth did this school district misuse their funds this badly?
Its like a bad nightmare.

And obviously, yet again, no music programs, no art programs, no nurses, no janitors, and no teachers?, and no libraries. And yet, these students are meant to do what? Go to school and try to get into college just like the kids at the local boarding school?

The situation in public education today is grim. And that's putting it lightly.