I have quoted Albert Einstein's remark about the importance of reading to young children, and when asked what else he would suggest, he replied, read to them even more. I have blogged about students in college who cannot read, as well as about efforts by teachers to help students that are falling behind because they cannot read and yet receive no time for special instruction and are passed on. Recently, I have read that educators are trying to correct those inadequacies with special teachers to help students struggling to read.
I have written about banning books in the past, but because encouraging children to read is so important, I thought it was time for an update. Perhaps covid caused more parents to be working from home, where they noticed the books their children were reading. For whatever reason, there was a particular attention given by parents who chose not simply to speak with their child's teachers and librarians about concern for allowing access for certain books, but also demanding the removal of these books from all children.
In the Wichita Eagle an article quoted a Superintendent justifying his screening process, declaring "We aren't banning books. We just want to make sure that our parents trust us, that we're communicating information with them, and that we're being good stewards for their children." The books at issue had already been approved by the School Board and individual teachers. but he felt more scrutiny was needed. Whether he was pressured by parents to ban books, made the decision on his own, or reached an agreement with the staff, the parents, and is own judgement is unknown.
The American Library Association reported a record-breaking number of attempts to ban books in 2022, up 38% from the previous year. A Graduate School of Education professor comment that "Books can change outcomes for students themselves when they see people who look like them represented," an example of the harm of excluding books with black characters from libraries, harmful not only to black students but to all students.
As for protecting young people from books parents regard as inappropriate, I recall a book from my early teens titled "Peyton Place." Although it was banned in 1956, copies must have circulated, and young boys thought they were very clever to memorize page numbers of the most disapproved pages and call out the page numbers to embarrass girls, despite the fact that the girls had not read the book. For those boys, banning only encouraged them to read that book, or at least pretend they had. I am not suggesting that "Peyton Place" or other inappropriate books should have been in school libraries. Rather, I am suggesting that banning something can sometimes be the most effective way to draw kids to an inappropriate book.
More important, as a Columbia Professor in Education Leadership explained, "Book bans diminish the quality of education students have access to and restrict their exposure to important perspectives that form the fabric of a culturally pluralist society like the United States for all students." She added, "It's about what we teach young people about our country, what we determine to be the truth, and what we believe should be included in the curriculum they are receiving."
Parents may think no problems exist in their community, or that banning books has made it safer for their children. Fortunately, book banning is not a problem everywhere. However, in some areas, often with good but misguided intentions, book banning has silenced young people from important books. The inability to discuss problems with adults, including parents, may result in seeking advice elsewhere, less appropriate. School districts, administrators, librarians, and educators may feel at risk for their jobs by simply mentioning the harm of book banning.
As I have researched for this blog, I found that some of the topics parents find unacceptable are easily found on television and other accessible sources. When parents ban books in schools, they may be withdrawing an opportunity for teachers to help their children by having removed the very books that were banned. Kids can be curious, sometimes rebellious, or insecure. Instead of leaving students to find the wrong places for answers, books can often provide the right guidance, as well as offering the opportunity to ask teachers and other trained educators for the guidance they need. Of course, parents want their children to come to them for guidance, but that is not always the decision that children make. Retreating to private schools and home schooling, where the books they disapprove are not in the library, may sometimes take away the very information and professional guidance kids need.