But is there any chance that could change?
That's the answer the capitol’s gay and lesbian community—and many librarians—are awaiting, pending a finalization of the district’s summer reading list on Friday, June 26th.
Officials are taking a second look at the list after a post appeared on the American Library Association’s GLBT listserve that said, “The DC (District of Columbia) Public Schools decided to scrub their summer reading list of all GLTB related books. This seems outrageous. We're thinking that if a parent writes a strong letter, it'll be the most effective. I'm thinking it should go to the mainstream press, and perhaps someone in the school system too.”
The post was originally made by Jeanne Lauber, a librarian at the DC Public Library on the Yahoo! discussion group “Lezbrian”. She goes on the say, “Apparently the public library system told the schools which books were GLTB (not knowing why they were being asked) and the schools removed them.”
Upon seeing the post, School Library Journal contacted both the DC Public Schools and the DC Public Library, and spokespeople at both said they had no knowledge of the situation. Since then, both institutions have ignored calls and emails from SLJ.
Summer break started June 15 for D.C. public schools, but the district’s summer reading Web site says the list is tentative with a final list being released on June 26th.
Nevertheless, pdf versions for each grade level are marked as final. The lists were created jointly by D.C Public media specialists, the Department of English Language Arts, and the District of Columbia Public Library. An introduction to the lists reads, “There are a variety of books from pre-kindergarten to grade twelve to satisfy every reading interest.”
Sources say that a meeting between the school district and public library took place late last week in the hope that GLBT titles will be included on the lists before printed copies are released to students.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.