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How Parents of Home Schooled Students Can Get
Their Children to Use the Library

by Pamela Chen

Let's Use the Library!

The local public library is a valuable resource for parents who are home schooling their children.  Despite this, many of them fail to take advantage of the resources offered by the library.  Further, many home schooled students are resistant to using a library if they are accustomed to getting all of their research  from the Web.

Most public libraries offer a wide variety of children's books and magazines, with many in Spanish and other languages. In addition to printed materials, libraries often lend audiotapes and videocassettes of children's' books and movies, and more libraries are making computers available to the public. Many libraries also sponsor special programs, including children's story hours, summer reading programs, and homework help. If your child has special needs, be sure to ask about services the library offers for the blind, the deaf, and those who are gifted or need remedial help. Many libraries have specially trained librarians for children. Feel free to ask them for help. 

Here are a few lesson plans and ideas that can help a parent get a home schooled child into the library:

-    Include children--even toddlers--in trips to the library, and go often. 
-    As soon as you can, help your child get a library card. 
-    Borrow recordings of children's stories and songs, cassette tapes, compact discs, videotapes, even puppets and educational toys. 
-    Find out if your library has computers and how your children can use them to learn or upgrade skills. 
-    Encourage your children to use the library to find information for their homework. 
-    Encourage your children to ask for help from you and the librarian in finding books and materials. 
-   Work with the librarian to teach older children how to find things in the library on their own. 
-   Teach your children how to take care of themselves in public places, especially if they use the library alone. Stress common sense guidelines for behavior in the library. 

Library Activities

Become a Member

for young children

1.  Sign up for a library card yourself, and check out books to learn stories, songs, rhymes, and fingerplays to use at home to stimulate and encourage your child's development. 

2.  Get a library card for your child as soon as possible. (Some libraries will issue a card as soon as a child can write his or her name.) 

3.  Encourage your child to check out books. This can encourage responsibility, too. 

4.  Take your child to the library for special programs

Get Into the Act 

for elementary school children

1.  Get your child into reading programs at the library. Many children earn certificates or other awards for reading books through special library programs. 

2.  Enroll your child in computer courses the library may offer. 

Reference Desk

for more advanced students 

1.  Encourage your children to use the library for homework you assign. Help them determine if the library has the resources they need or if they need to check other information sources.  Try to design your assignments to match library resources.

2.  Give your children encouragement, advice, and a ride if they need it, but resist the temptation to take over an assignment. Let your children be responsible for researching and writing reports. 

3.  Check out the special services your library offers for helping students with school assignments, such as homework hotlines and term paper clinics.  Home schoolers can use these services too for assignments you give your child.

4.  Build up your personal library by getting books for 50 cents or $1.00 at yard sales. 

Problems

Some home school parents have reported problems with librarians and library staff who give their children a hard time when they are in the library during school hours.  If this happens, immediately let the library staff  know that your child is home schooled and has the right to be there during the day.

Some parents have reported librarians who are unhappy or resistant to home schooled children because the librarians don't believe in home schooling.  If this happens, report the incident to the library administration immediately.  If you don't get a satisfactory response, write a letter to the library board and to the local paper.  You pay taxes and the local public library is obligated to serve you and your home schooled child.  If the library forgets this, remind the library staff forcefully.

Good luck!


 


 


 
 
 
 


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