Few things are as
exciting as assembling a classroom library in an English language arts
classroom! A lover of books myself, I want to share the amazing experience of reading
quality texts with my students. As reading volume correlates positively with
vocabulary development and reading and writing achievement, the goal for me as
an elementary ELA teacher is to offer a large classroom library with diverse
texts and a healthy range of reading levels. We can no longer be assured that
students take weekly visits to the public library or enjoy literacy-rich
environments at home. Twenty minutes of independent reading per day. Fifty
percent of the school day involved in reading and writing. These imperatives
demand classroom libraries that are robust, accessible, and engaging.
As I sift through stacks of books for my classroom library, I remember that my library
should be organized and accessible for students. Making high-quality texts available
to students is one of the primary considerations in building my library. This is accomplished through offering texts on grade level, above
grade level, and below grade level. Libraries do not necessarily have to be
arranged by reading level, but students should be taught how to find books that
they can actually read. Further, I want my students to understand they are both welcome and encouraged to explore our books. The classroom library is always a shared
space.
In ELA, I am also
not limited by content; I should offer books across a wide range of content areas,
topics, genres, and formats. A good library will then have excellent picture
books with powerful imagery and writing and superb illustrations. There
will be chapter books, series books, graphic novels, novels in verse, and
poetry anthologies. All seven genres will also be included especially
non-fiction. Young students are often intrigued by topics such as weather,
horses, space, etc. so texts must be available to nurture these preferences. Books
will incorporate concepts and topics relevant to my students as well as diverse,
multicultural characters and themes. But the unifying characteristic across all
my books will be quality. The books that I make available in my classroom must
represent the best authors, illustrators, and content from past and current
publications.
Although I am
clearly starting with a collection of tried and true favorites, my students’
interests will direct new additions. I want to capitalize on what my students
want to learn by offering them related texts. As an elementary ELA teacher, I
also hope to connect every student with a transitional or chapter books series,
recognizing the motivational power of series on student reading. The classroom
library then is more than books in bins with crafty labels in bright colors. It
is a dynamic space that grows and evolves with students’ needs and interests.
It invites students to preview, experience, and read texts, and it empowers
students with competence and choice in their reading. And most
importantly, a good classroom library and daily independent reading make school-based reading positive and engaging.
Honestly I had not given any thought to how the library should be organized. Your point about making students aware of how to find the book they are looking for is very useful. I for one was a serious series reader as a child. I think I read the whole Hardy Boys series. You are so correct in recognizing the motivational power of these types of books.
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