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Michigan students' reading levels fall as school librarians go extinct

Blue Mountains Library
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Flickr - http://bit.ly/1xMszCg

Kathy Lester's conversation with Stateside, August 26, 2019.

Credit Blue Mountains Library / Flickr - http://bit.ly/1xMszCg
/
Flickr - http://bit.ly/1xMszCg

This school year, districts in Michigan will start holding back third-graders who are more than one grade level behind in reading.

Michigan students have been sliding down the national rankings of test scores for reading.

At the same time, school librarians are becoming less common in the state.

Kathy Lester is with the American Association of School Librarians.

She told Stateside Monday many school librarian positions were cut during the Great Recession.

“Since school librarians tend to be a single person in their building, it seemed easier to cut those positions than to cut classroom teachers,” Lester said.

Lester says students at schools without librarians are at risk of falling behind academically. She says librarians help students with college and career readiness.

A package of bills currently making its way through the state legislature would require every Michigan school to have school libraries staffed with certified librarians.

“Our Association is supporting those bills and there's a lot of the other organizations that are supporting that as well,” Lester said.

You can hear Lester’s full interview with Stateside above.

Copyright 2019 Michigan Radio

Paulette is a blogger for Michigan Radio's State of Opportunity project, which looks at kids from low-income families and what it takes to get them ahead. She previously interned as a reporter in the Michigan Radio newsroom.
Paulette Parker
Paulette is a junior at Eastern Michigan University, majoring in media studies and journalism. She holds an Associate degree in Journalism from Washtenaw Community College, where she served as news editor of the student publication, The Washtenaw Voice.