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Thirty percent of challenges led to a book’s removal in 2023. And while 34 percent of librarians who experienced challenges have considered leaving the profession, 65 percent are motivated to fight censorship.
School libraries are focusing less on technology since the pandemic. But AI and its role in education are top of mind, our latest survey shows.
Fantasy or contemporary, funny or serious, these books show characters of different cultural backgrounds, skin colors, and gender identities, demonstrating the many ways in which Jews can be intersectional.
More librarians find their work challenging, but most still love what they do, the latest LJ/SLJ Survey shows.
Librarians will be key players in executing NCTE's new policy statement on including more nonfiction across subjects K-12.
Fines bar kids from library services, don’t bring in much revenue, and force staffers to spend time on bookkeeping. Several librarians say the pandemic was the catalyst for ditching them.
Though they are rarely recognized with merit awards, licensed content books are hugely popular and often timely—addressing social-emotional issues and, lately, concerns related to the pandemic—and the comfort of familiar TV and movie characters has strong appeal for beginning readers.
COVID has changed the way publishers promote books—and how libraries buy them.
When everyone in a school or community is reading the same book, that shared experience brings people together, and, as school librarian Terri Gaussoin said, "We need that now more than ever."
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