Our administration started something new this year which seems to be working well. All study hall students report to the cafeteria with three teachers monitoring.
Teachers
take attendance there and then sign out any students who want to use the Library. That way the students who want to eat and socialize have the option to
do so and the students who come to the library for the
most part are there to study or work quietly.
From: casl-l-bounces@mylist.net [mailto:casl-l-bounces@mylist.net]
On Behalf Of Kristie McGarry
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2012 3:05 PM
To: CASL-L@mylist.net
Subject: RE: [CASL-L] Study halls in library
It may help your case to ask your principal to consider the ‘liability’ component. The rules about not allowing students to eat outside of the cafeteria,
for instance, exist in part because there is a question of who is liable if there is an issue with food. Are the students engaging in other behaviors in the library where they or their property could be hurt and you could be held responsible? I don’t know
how far you want to push the issue of liability but this may be an area of concern for you in addition to the importance of maintaining an appropriate educational atmosphere. My principal also loves to see the library full of students regardless of ‘why’ they
are there, so I understand where you’re coming from..Good luck!
Kristie
Kristie McGarry
Library Media Specialist
Derby High School
8 Nutmeg Avenue
Derby CT 06418
From: casl-l-bounces@mylist.net [mailto:casl-l-bounces@mylist.net]
On Behalf Of Cathy Andronik
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2012 11:51 AM
To: CASL-L@mylist.net
Subject: [CASL-L] Study halls in library
I have finally gotten a meeting with my principal regarding the new (this school year) decision to base one study hall per period in the library. It was one of those wonderful surprises
I discovered on the first day of classes; the administration didn't even give me a heads-up, much less ask how it would impact us. Is there any research (or even anecdotal information) on whether this is a "best practice?" There is a teacher assigned to
the study hall; some few watch those kids like hawks to make sure they're following school and library rules, others bury themselves in their computers or grading with their backs to the kids and my aide and I end up supervising their kids along with the library
drop-ins. During one period there are about 50 kids assigned to the study hall, and we generally get upwards of 20 drop-ins; the study hall kids during that period treat it as recess (eating, using devices, playing games, being generally loud) and the supervising
teacher lets it all happen. After a few "this isn't working" emails to the administrators (who decline to observe the mayhem), I finally sent a SERIOUS "this REALLY isn't working" email after a kid asked if he could go to another room in the school to sit
and read quietly. Administration's response was that they love seeing lots and lots of kids in the library. I have stressed that they need to think less about warm bodies and more about CCSS, embedding information literacy skills into the curriculum, securing
funding for databases (we had a $0 budget this year) and enough computers in the lab to accommodate a class of 28, etc.
Thanks!
Cathy Andronik
Teacher Librarian
Brien McMahon HS
Norwalk, CT