第126章 BROOKLYN
- Library Work with Children
- Alice Isabel Hazeltine
- 445字
- 2016-03-02 16:32:42
In the children's room of the Pratt Institute Free Library,storytelling and reading aloud have had a natural place since the opening of the new library building in 1896.Years before this library was built the lot on which it stands was appropriated as a playground by the children of the neighborhood--a neighborhood that has been gradually transformed by the life of the institution which is the center of interest.The recognition of the necessity for play and the value of providing a place for it--children now play freely in the park on the library grounds--exercised a marked influence on the conception of work to be done by this children's library and upon its subsequent development.
The children's librarian was never allowed to forget that the trustees had been boys in that very neighborhood and remembered how boys felt.It was evident from the outset,that the children's room was to be made of living interest to boys and girls who were very much alive to other things than books.
Probably more suggestions were gained from looking out of windows,and from walks in the neighborhood and beyond it,than from any other sources.
Fourteen years ago there were no other public libraries with rooms for children,in Brooklyn;and boys frequently walked from two to five miles to visit this one.During the past six years a weekly story hour with a well-defined program based upon the varied interests of boys and girls of different ages has been conducted from October to May of each year.
The children's librarian plans for the story hour,and does much of the storytelling herself;but from time to time some one from the outside world is invited to come and tell stories in order to give the children a change,and to give breadth and balance to the library's outlook upon the story interests of boys and girls.
Listening as one of the group has greatly strengthened the feeling of comradeship between children's librarian and children,and the stories have been enjoyed more keenly than as if one person had told them all.
The evening on which Mr.Dan Beard told "Bear Stories"is still remembered,and another evening is associated with the old hero tales of Japan told by a Japanese,who was claimed by the boys as one of themselves,and known thereafter as "The Japanese Boy."Pure enjoyment of such a story hour by children whose homes offered nothing in place of it already gives assurance of results rich in memories and associations,since men and women who were coming fourteen years ago as children are now bringing THEIRchildren to look at picture books.