Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is helpful! Thanks for posting.
My kid’s school is doing the scholastic book fair and I dislike the idea of supporting banned kid’s books. As an adult, most of my favorite books have been targeted. This year it’s too late but it’s worthwhile to think about for next year.
You’re welcome. And yes it’s too late for this year (my kids’ book fair was two weeks ago!) but for next year I think it’s important to know that Scholastic is doing the work of those who would ban books. I think all children should be able to see themselves and I think it’s especially egregious that Black history is being carved out. I don’t know much about Lebron James (other than he’s very good at basketball) but it seems just offensive that a book that’s probably pretty innocuous is able to be kept away from kids.
I’m in a position to take my kids to the library and independent book stores whenever, but not everyone has that privilege. This is just gross of Scholastic.
Anonymous wrote:If what Scholastic is saying is true that their only choices were between removing those books entirely or make them an opt-in collection, I'm not sure what else they could have done and continued to serve a nationwide market. Maybe the answer is to move to an independent, local supplier, but I don't know how feasible or affordable that is for every school (or school district). It's not fair to condemn a nationwide book distributor that has to account for the laws in other states if they want to continue operating at a nationwide level. The blame lies with the elected officials that are passing these book bans, not the teachers, librarians, or book distributors that are forced to respond to the bans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having volunteered at these in the past. Kids regardless of race or ethnicity want to buy
1. toys and trinkets that parents don't want them wasting money on
2. books with popular characters from cartoons/tv/movie/youtube/tiktok are the focus
3. non fiction books with really good pictures and fun facts
And then the rest
so no kids aren't going there searching out books with diverse characters. They would much rather buy a sparkly pen or similar trinket. Now sure they might buy a book if an adult tells them to but it's not like the overwhelming majority of kids are going to seek out some serious books.
At our school many parents go to the fair with their kids and help pick books.
Anonymous wrote:Having volunteered at these in the past. Kids regardless of race or ethnicity want to buy
1. toys and trinkets that parents don't want them wasting money on
2. books with popular characters from cartoons/tv/movie/youtube/tiktok are the focus
3. non fiction books with really good pictures and fun facts
And then the rest
so no kids aren't going there searching out books with diverse characters. They would much rather buy a sparkly pen or similar trinket. Now sure they might buy a book if an adult tells them to but it's not like the overwhelming majority of kids are going to seek out some serious books.
Anonymous wrote:Kids have to be protected from explicit content like "Home for Meow: Kitten Around"
Anonymous wrote:Having volunteered at these in the past. Kids regardless of race or ethnicity want to buy
1. toys and trinkets that parents don't want them wasting money on
2. books with popular characters from cartoons/tv/movie/youtube/tiktok are the focus
3. non fiction books with really good pictures and fun facts
And then the rest
so no kids aren't going there searching out books with diverse characters. They would much rather buy a sparkly pen or similar trinket. Now sure they might buy a book if an adult tells them to but it's not like the overwhelming majority of kids are going to seek out some serious books.