East county teacher librarians stand in solidarity with Sweetwater

A Feb. 24 letter penned to the Sweetwater Union High School District and collectively signed by eight Grossmont Union High School District teacher librar­ians asks the neighboring dis­trict to reconsider possible plans to eliminate credentialed teach­er librarians.

Upon learning that schools at the southern end of San Diego county are at risk of losing their teacher librarians, El Cajon Val­ley teacher Librarian Anthony Devine says he reached out to fellow GUHSD librarian, West Hills High School’s Suzanne Sannwald and began crafting a letter that they hope will reso­nate with SUHSD.

According to Devine, the let­ter was primarily written to show support but also to raise parent awareness of how their children’s school might be af­fected by those potential budget cuts.

“Parents aren’t necessarily aware of staffing outside their children’s classroom teachers. Until I became a librarian, I didn’t think about it… We are one of the only certificated teachers on campus that touch every stu­dent,” Devine said.

Devine, who started his ca­reer as an English teacher, says the trend toward defunding school libraries and eliminating credentialed school librarians in favor of part-time library techni­cian employees is not unheard of in districts across the United States.

Devine said that GUHSD is lucky to have district leaders who recognize the benefits of teacher librarians as partners and advocates for literacy, and not a burden to bear.

However, he and other east county GUHSD librarians wanted to caution neighboring SUHSD that cutting funding for their fellow teacher librarians would be the wrong decision for students in this region.

Sweetwater High School librarian Barbara Chappell- Brown agreed and said all stu­dents, including those in the SUHSD deserve to have an ad­vocate and librarians fit that niche.

“Sweetwater is a wonderful district but I am concerned about possible budget cuts that might eliminate librarians or some of what we offer to our stu­dents. We just had Read Across America and these kids were in the library reading in Span­ish and English, writing poetry, learning how to stand up and speak in public. People don’t realize that the library is more than just checking in or check­ing out a book. It is a hub of lit­eracy,” Chappell-Brown said.

Chula Vista High School teacher librarians Janice Gilm­ore-See said librarians in the dis­trict do more than check in and out textbooks and laptops.

“We are part of the teaching community at our schools. We teach Digital Citizenship, Information Literacy skills, research skills, we bring diversity into the schools with multicultural literature,” Gilmore-See said.

In an email, the CHVS librar­ian wrote:

“The current proposal to eliminate librarians is based on the misconception that school libraries are silent, sterile book storage. Nothing could be far­ther from the truth. The library is a busy, humming hub of ac­tivity, often with full capacity before school and at lunch. Students choose to visit all day long, and teachers send their students with library passes knowing that a teacher librar­ians Librarian is there to assist and supervise students.”

“A school library is incred­ibly valuable, not just in our district but in every district. I thought we should give support to our neighbors and Suzanne brilliantly put together talking points,” Devine said.

Gilmore-See said that in ad­dition to the letter sent by GUHSD librarians, the Ameri­can Library Association, the American Association of School Libraries, and the California School Library Association all wrote letters to Sweetwater standing in solidarity with the teacher librarians.

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