by: Amy Nile
Jenny Granger is delivering books to kids around Snohomish to beat the “summer slide.” Between tests in June and September, there's a
general drop in students' scores. Granger says a big factor is the fact kids
don't read as much during the summer.
“We can complain about it or we can do something about it,” said Granger, a
teacher and librarian at Snohomish's Emerson Elementary.
She has turned an old yellow school bus into a roving bookmobile. Now she's
spending her summer break bringing the library to kids in trailer parks and to
places with activities for children.
“These kids are coming from very needy households and they don't have a lot of
books at home,” Granger said.
The rolling Book Cafe
makes four stops on Tuesdays that coincide with the times and locations of
subsidized summer lunch programs. Granger encourages kids to get on board and
pick out books.
“I just get out of the way and let them go,” Granger said.
She pulls into to the Circle H trailer park, where more than a dozen barefoot
and flip-flop-clad children stand awaiting her arrival. Several run up and give
her hugs.
“The kids love it,” Granger said. “It's like hero status.”
Leslie Hernandez, who just finished fifth grade at Emerson, said she found a
book she previously borrowed but had to return before she finished it. She was
excited to read the rest of the story.
“I love to get new books,” she said. “I don't like reading books twice.”
The kids can take as many titles as they can read in a week. They can hold onto
the books or bring them back.
“If they love them, keep them,” Granger said. “The commitment is to read them.”
Inside the bus, the books are shelved in wooden boxes similar to those in a
record store. That way kids can see the illustrations on the front as they sort
through titles.
“I know you're not supposed to judge a book by its cover but kids are very
graphic,” Granger said.
She made the bus look cartoonish with a set of hot pink eyelashes over the
headlights.
Granger volunteers her time for the bookmobile. The school district allowed her
to use the bus, which was about to be surplused. Snohomish Education Foundation
gave her $5,000 to retrofit the bus, buy supplies and pay for gas. People around
town have also pitched in thousands of books.
“This whole thing was Jenny's vision,” said Kristin Foley, a spokeswoman for the
district. “It's been her passion and her dream.”
Granger started trying to get students to read more over the summer three years
ago. She opened the library for a few hours each week during the break.
“It was great for the kids who came, but they weren't the ones we were worried
about,” Granger said.
Last year, she tried the traveling approach in a red van from the 1970s. But
more volunteer labor was needed to lug tubs of books in and out at each stop.
“We sweated and died in the heat,” Granger said. “There had to be a better way.
It's a little crazy that this is what I'm doing with my day off.”
While the food program goes to areas determined by the federal government, the
bookmobile could include more stops in the future.
“It doesn't matter where you live. Some families just don't read,” said Misha
Dacy, a librarian at Seattle Hill Elementary.
Granger's next mission is to have ebooks available. She has a plan in the works
that will allow kids to download to their devices from inside the bus. She's not
sure when the technology will arrive but she is expecting it soon.
“It's an awkward conversation because people say if kids can't afford books then
why do they have devices,” she said. “Well, the reality is they do.”
The bus started making its rounds in late June. Granger said interest is strong.
She's had to stop her route halfway through to restock books.
“What this bus has done for our community is tremendous,” said Foley, the
district spokeswoman. “The kids are so excited. It's heartwarming.”
from: HeraldNet
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