An interview I conducted with Travis Jonker, an
elementary school librarian in Michigan, founder and blogger of 100 Scope Notes, reviewer for
School Library Journal, former judge for CYBILS Awards, and member of
the 2014 Caldecott committee.
In addition to being a school librarian, you’re involved in a
lot of different things books related, such as your blog, reviewing for
SLJ and other things. How do you hope make a difference in all that you
do?
Travis: First and foremost I’m looking to make an
impact on the students in my school district, making sure we have for
them the latest and greatest books, books that are interesting to them.
Also, I want to work with students and teachers in our district,
teaching information literacy skills. If I can, I’d also like to share
some of those things with other people through my blog or with things
that I write. I think that’s a cool way to spread the word a little bit
and let people know what has worked for me, and that it might work for
them too.
What
is the “word” or message you want to spread?
Travis: As far as books go, the big thing
I want to get across is that everything is reading. One of my favorite
parts about the last 10 years or so is that a lot of things that people
didn’t really consider reading before have become a lot more
legitimate. Especially things like graphic novels and comic books. When
I was in middle school, I hardly checked out any books from our school
library because I was reading comic books, magazines and those sorts of
things, but I was still reading. What you read today might get you
interested in something else later. As long as you’re reading, it’s a
good thing.
Tell me a little bit more about the idea that “everything is
reading”.
Travis: A couple years back they started naming
children’s literature ambassadors. The first year was Jon Scieszka and
his big push throughout his career had been getting boys to read more.
But I was so pumped up when he made his platform a push for giving kids
choice and letting them choose books they’re interested in. Whether
it’s a magazine, book, or even a website, all of that is reading. It
might not be what has traditionally been considered reading but it
really is.
Do
you find sometimes that
there is pushback from parents or others from some of these other
things that in the past weren’t considered reading?
Travis: Sometimes, but I think it’s becoming less
and less of an issue. If there‘s pushback, a lot of times it’s going to
be with graphic novels and comic books. Sometimes at book fairs I’ll
hear a parent say, “You can’t choose that because it’s not a book.”
When that happens I try to explain that it is reading. A lot of times I
just open the book up and flip through the pages with the parent to
help show that there is reading involved here. I also think sometimes
it can be important for a child to have more of a transition. They grow
up on picture books, where pictures take up the entire page and tell
the story. To then switch to text-only is a pretty abrupt switch.
How does reading help students get the skill sets they’ll need
for the future?
Travis: Reading is the basis for
everything. If a kid is a good reader and reads a lot, it’s just going
to help them out in whatever they do. It’s the foundation for
everything else.
What
advice do you give
parents, teachers or other librarians to help students get the latest
and greatest books?
Travis: I think one thing that is important to keep
in mind is to give students choice. In the Book Whisperer
by Donalyn Miller, one of her big pushes is to let kids read what they
want to read. In her classroom, she saw choice create great advances in
her students’ interest in reading. It seems like common sense, but for
awhile we were so bogged down in whether a book’s reading level was a
little bit too high or low? So finding the latest and greatest book for
a child is about finding something they’re interested in. For
school librarians it means offering a really wide variety of books on a
wide variety of topics. For parents I think it’s just important to
remember to let kids read what they’re interested in. That might mean
comic books. Sometimes it might be middle grade novels or a classic. I
think it’s all legitimate.
Are
there certain books you
tend to recommend more than others?
Travis: Horror is always popular. Half-Minute
Horrors is one I like to recommend. There’s a newer
series by Patrick Carman called Skeleton Creek
that’s been very popular for 5th and 6th grade. Nonfiction remains
popular, especially with books that get more specific like visual
encyclopedias.
In terms of fiction, sports remain really big. A lot of Tim Green
books get checked out. One series that’s been
really popular is the Origami Yoda
series by Tom Angleberger. There’s also When You
Reach Me and Liar
& Spy by Rebecca Stead.
Some
of the graphic novels like Lunch Lady
and Baby Mouse
definitely grab kids and have been really popular as well. Some of the
lesser known graphic novels I like to recommend include Jellaby
by Kean Soo and Mouse Guard
by David Petersen. It’s a great time for books right now to be honest.
There’s just tons of stuff coming out that is interesting and that kids
are interested in picking up.
(This librarian booktalk was originally posted on November 26, 2012)
Copyright 2001-2023 by Ken Baker
How to Care for your T-Rex pictures by Dave Coverly
Old MacDonald had a Dragon pictures by Christopher Santoro
Brave Little Monster pictures by Geoffrey Hayes
Cow Can't Sleep pictures by Steve Gray