12 Ways Libraries Are Good for the Country
By Leonard Kniffel
Americans
love their libraries, and advances in technology have multiplied the
ways in which libraries enrich the quality of life in their communities.
Whether they are in an elementary school or a university, a museum or a
corporation, public or private, our nation's libraries offer a lifetime
of learning. To library supporters everywhere—Friends, trustees, board
members, patrons, and volunteers—American Libraries magazine
offers this gift of 12 ideals toward which librarians strive as they
provide comprehensive access to the record of human existence. It will
take all of us, in a spirit of pride and freedom, to maintain libraries
as a living reality in a free nation through the 21st century.
1. Libraries sustain democracy.
Libraries provide access to information and multiple points of view
so that people can make knowledgeable decisions on public policy
throughout their lives. With their collections, programs, and
professional expertise, librarians help their patrons identify accurate
and authoritative data and use information resources wisely to stay
informed. The public library is the only institution in American society
whose purpose is to guard against the tyrannies of ignorance and
conformity.
2. Libraries break down boundaries.
Libraries of various kinds offer services and programs for people at
all literacy levels, readers with little or no English skills,
preschoolers, students, homebound senior citizens, prisoners, homeless
or impoverished individuals, and persons with physical or learning
disabilities. Libraries rid us of fences that obstruct our vision and
our ability to communicate and to educate ourselves.
3. Libraries level the playing field.
By making access to information resources and technology available to
all, regardless of income, class, or background, a public library
levels the playing field and helps close the gap between the rich and
the poor. Libraries unite people and make their resources available to
everyone in the community, regardless of social status. There are more
public libraries than McDonald's restaurants in the United States.
4. Libraries value the individual.
Libraries offer choices between mainstream and alternative
viewpoints, between traditional and visionary concepts, and between
monocultural and multicultural perspectives. Library doors swing open
for independent thinking without prejudgment. Library collections and
services offer the historical global, cultural, and political
perspective that is necessary to foster a spirit of exploration that
challenges orthodoxy and conformity.
5. Libraries nourish creativity.
By providing an atmosphere that stimulates curiosity, libraries
create opportunities for unstructured learning and serendipitous
discovery. As repositories not only of books but of images and a wide
variety of media, libraries offer access to the accumulated record of
mankind with assistance from professional staff delivering these
resources through the physical library, the web, and outreach services.
6. Libraries open young minds.
Children’s and young adult librarians offer story hours, book talks,
summer reading activities, career planning, art projects, gaming
competitions, and other programs to spark youthful imaginations.
Bringing children into a library can transport them from the commonplace
to the extraordinary. From story hours for preschoolers to career
planning for high schoolers, children's librarians make a difference
because they care about the unique developmental needs of every
individual who comes to them for help.
7. Libraries return high dividends.
Libraries offer big returns to the communities they serve—anywhere
from $1.30 to $10 in services for every $1 invested in them. Strong
public and school libraries make a city or town more desirable as a
business location. Americans check out an average of more than seven
books a year from public libraries, and it costs them roughly $34 in
taxes—about the cost of a single hardcover book.
8. Libraries build communities.
People gather at the library to find and share information,
experience and experiment with the arts and media, and engage in
community discussions and games. No narrow definition will work for
libraries. There is the community of scholars, the deaf community, the
gay community, the gaming community, and countless others, each with its
libraries and specialized collections. Libraries validate and unify;
they save lives, literally and by preserving the record of those lives.
9. Libraries support families.
Libraries offer an alternate venue for parents and their children to
enhance activities traditionally conducted at home by providing homework
centers, parenting collections, after-school programs, outreach,
one-on-one reading, and early literacy programs. Like the families they
serve, libraries everywhere are adapting to meet the economic and social
challenges of the 21st century. In libraries, families find
professionals dedicated to keeping their services family-friendly by
offering a diverse selection of materials to which people of many
backgrounds can relate.
10. Libraries build technology skills.
Library services and programs foster critical-thinking skills and
information literacy. Nearly 100% of American libraries offer internet
access and assistance with problem-solving aptitude, scientific inquiry,
cross-disciplinary thinking, media literacy, productivity and
leadership skills, civic engagement, global awareness, and health and
environmental awareness. Library patrons search for jobs online, polish
résumés with word processing software, fill out applications, research
new professions, sign up for career workshops, and look for financial
assistance. Public libraries serve as technology hubs by offering a wide
range of public access computing and internet access services at no
charge to users.
11. Libraries offer sanctuary.
By providing an atmosphere conducive to reflection, libraries induce a
feeling of serenity and transcendence that opens the mind to new ideas
and interpretations. In the library we are answerable to no one. We can
be alone with our private thoughts, fantasies, hopes, and dreams, and we
are free to nourish what is most precious to us with the silent
companionship of others who share our quest. Libraries are places where
computers and databases provide superior access to information and they
offer an atmosphere of light and textures that beautiful architecture
and design foster.
12. Libraries preserve the past.
Libraries are repositories of community history, oral narratives, and
audiovisual records of events and culture, and when these local
resources are digitized and placed online as digital libraries,
communities and cultures thousands of miles away can share in the
experience. Libraries and information science and technology enable us
to communicate through distance and time with the living and the dead. A
library is a miracle kept available by the meticulous resource
description and access that is the work of the librarian. Libraries
preserve the record and help their patrons make sense of it in the
Information Age.
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